Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
Tokyo Inflation Slows a Tad More Than Expected on Subsidy Impact

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- Inflation in Tokyo slowed more than expected as government subsidies meant to offset energy costs distorted readings, a result that isn’t likely to deter the central bank from considering more hikes to its benchmark interest rate.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Consumer prices excluding fresh food in the capital rose 2.2% in February from a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs on Friday. That missed the median estimate of 2.3% but was above the Bank of Japan’s target. Inflation barring fresh food and energy gained 1.9%, in a sign that underlying inflation is holding steady.

The yen briefly weakened to 150.15 to the dollar after the data before retracing that move. “No one in the market reacted to Tokyo CPI a few years back, but now the impact is huge,” said Shoki Omori, chief global desk strategist at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo.

The pace of inflation in the capital has been slower than the national trend due in part to education subsidies that are only in effect in Tokyo. The main gauge for national prices accelerated to 3.2% in January.

As a result, even with the slowdown in Tokyo the steady growth of prices will likely keep the BOJ on track to continue paring back the degree of monetary easing by nudging rates higher toward a neutral level. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect officials to wait until summer before hiking again after they raised the rate just last month.

“The inflation trend beyond food prices hasn’t really changed too much. I don’t think the pace of price increases is slowing down,” said Taro Saito, head of economic research at NLI Research Institute. “The BOJ is trying to continue with gradual rate hikes, and today’s data won’t prevent that.”

In a risk scenario, the rate increase could come as early as the meeting ending May 1, according to the survey. Through March 2027, the BOJ expects inflation to stay at or above its price target of 2%.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“Considering the favorable signals for consumption, and the underlying inflationary pressures, this report won’t stop the Bank of Japan from continuing to pare stimulus. We still see the next rate hike coming at the April 30-May 1 meeting.”

— Taro Kimura, economist

Click here to read the full report.