Investment Institute
Market Alerts

Japan reaction: Cautious stance from the BoJ

  • 26 April 2024 (3 min read)
KEY POINTS
The Bank of Japan voted to keep its short-term policy rates unchanged at 0-0.1%, as expected.
The board also stated that it would maintain its bond buying program in line with its decision in March.
The statement was short, offering little in the way of forward guidance, causing the yen to weaken again. It is now at a fresh low since the 1990s of 156.77.
We still don’t think the Bank will respond directly to currency weakness. The key to us still seems to be the requirement of a virtuous wage/price spiral taking hold.
Latest Tokyo inflation data for April were weaker than expected.
Strong wage negotiations and improving confidence should boost consumption and therefore prevent a sharp drop back in inflation.
We see a further 10bp hike to short-term policy rate this year and then two further 10bp hikes in 2025.

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) maintained the policy interest rate at 0-0.1% at its April meeting, as was widely expected, and stated that it would continue to conduct purchases of Japanese government bonds (JGBs), commercial paper and corporate bonds in line with the decision made at the previous meeting in March. It did, however, remove the part of the statement pertaining to the exact amount of JGB purchases (it previously had stated it would make purchases of around 6 trillion yen per month).

In its accompanying quarterly outlook report, the BoJ revised down its outlook for GDP in fiscal 2024 on the back of the weakness in the latter part of fiscal 2023, though it does expect private consumption to rise moderately over the coming year, given the stronger-than-expected wage negotiations, tax cuts and improving confidence. In addition, an expected pick-up in global demand for IT-related goods is expected to boost production and exports. The BoJ now expect GDP growth of 0.8% fiscal 2024 and 1% in fiscal 2025, whereas it had anticipated growth of 1.2% in fiscal 2024 previously. On the price front, the board expects CPI inflation ex. fresh food to hit 2.8% in fiscal 2024, before slowing to 1.9% in fiscal 2025, compared to its previous expectations of 2.4% and 1.8%, respectively. The upward revision was based on the assumption the output gap will improve and that longer-term inflation expectations will rise as the “virtuous cycle between wages and prices continues to intensify”. The board also state that “in the second half of the projection period, it is likely to be at a level that is generally consistent with the price stability target.”

The monetary policy statement, however, was very short and offered little guidance on the outlook for monetary policy over the coming months. As a result, and also reflecting weaker Tokyo CPI inflation, the yen weakened further, hitting a fresh low 156.77 – its lowest level since 1990, having paused its depreciation in recent days following unified comments made by officials from the US, Japan and South Korea.

It still seems very unlikely to us that the BoJ will respond directly to the weaker currency. Indeed, in the following press conference Governor Ueda emphasized a patient approach to waiting for an acceleration in the underlying inflation rate, accompanied by wage growth and domestic demand, indicating that it is premature for further interest rate hikes. The key still seems to be whether any upward price pressure would feed through to broader inflation and wage growth. On this front, the outlook is mixed. The Tokyo CPI data for April dropped to 1.6%, from 2.4% in March, well below expectations, 2.2%. Some of that was due to the fact school fees were waved in Tokyo in April – an idiosyncratic factor that will not affect broader national CPI - but that only accounted for 0.5 percentage points off the fall, suggesting some genuine broad-based weakness. More broadly, rising wages following the Shunto wage negotiations and ongoing disinflation should start to boost households’ real incomes and therefore spending from Q2. All told, we still think the BoJ will push through one more 10bps hike to its short-term interest rates this year, with a further 20bps by end-2025, but see the BoJ’s current inflation expectations around its target as not pointing to a materially more aggressive adjustment in policy from here. We also expect it to start considering its balance sheet policy towards the end of this year, albeit that any implementation will be unlikely until at least 2025.

Eurozone data wrap-up: Path beyond June ECB rate cut remains uncertain
Macroeconomics Market Alerts

Eurozone data wrap-up: Path beyond June ECB rate cut remains uncertain

  • by François Cabau, Hugo Le Damany
  • 30 April 2024 (3 min read)
Investment Institute
Causes and FX
Macroeconomics

Causes and FX

  • by Gilles Moëc
  • 29 April 2024 (10 min read)
Investment Institute
April Monthly Investment Strategy - US shifts outlook, who shall follow?
Macroeconomics Monthly Market Update

April Monthly Investment Strategy - US shifts outlook, who shall follow?

  • by David Page, François Cabau, and others
  • 26 April 2024 (10 min read)
Investment Institute
Japan reaction: Cautious stance from the BoJ
Macroeconomics Market Alerts

Japan reaction: Cautious stance from the BoJ

  • by Gabriella Dickens
  • 26 April 2024 (3 min read)
Investment Institute
April Op-Ed - Looking outside the West
Macroeconomics Monthly Market Update

April Op-Ed - Looking outside the West

  • by Gilles Moëc, Chris Iggo
  • 26 April 2024 (10 min read)
Investment Institute

    Disclaimer

    This document is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment research or financial analysis relating to transactions in financial instruments as per MIF Directive (2014/65/EU), nor does it constitute on the part of AXA Investment Managers or its affiliated companies an offer to buy or sell any investments, products or services, and should not be considered as solicitation or investment, legal or tax advice, a recommendation for an investment strategy or a personalized recommendation to buy or sell securities.

    It has been established on the basis of data, projections, forecasts, anticipations and hypothesis which are subjective. Its analysis and conclusions are the expression of an opinion, based on available data at a specific date.

    All information in this document is established on data made public by official providers of economic and market statistics. AXA Investment Managers disclaims any and all liability relating to a decision based on or for reliance on this document. All exhibits included in this document, unless stated otherwise, are as of the publication date of this document.

    Furthermore, due to the subjective nature of these opinions and analysis, these data, projections, forecasts, anticipations, hypothesis, etc. are not necessary used or followed by AXA IM’s portfolio management teams or its affiliates, who may act based on their own opinions. Any reproduction of this information, in whole or in part is, unless otherwise authorised by AXA IM, prohibited.

    Issued in the UK by AXA Investment Managers UK Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK. Registered in England and Wales No: 01431068. Registered Office: 22 Bishopsgate London EC2N 4BQ

    In other jurisdictions, this document is issued by AXA Investment Managers SA’s affiliates in those countries.

    © AXA Investment Managers 2024. All rights reserved