• The Bank of Japan holds monetary policy steady

    23 Jan 2018 | Economic News

The Bank of Japan announced Tuesday it was keeping its monetary policy steady, a move that was in line with market expectations.

In a statement released following the conclusion of its two-day meeting, the BOJ said it would keep the deposit rate unchanged at negative 0.1 percent and the 10-year yield target around 0 percent.

The central bank earlier this month announced it was slightly reducing its purchases of long-dated Japanese government bonds, which led to speculation that the institution would be the latest to follow in the footsteps of global central banks in tightening policy.

But with inflation still "well below" a 2 percent target, normalization remained a premature suggestion for the BOJ, Kohei Iwahara, an economist at Natixis Japan Securities, wrote in a note ahead of the central bank's Tuesday announcement.

"Any hint to normalize could strengthen the yen further, increasing challenges of the BOJ to meet the inflation target," Iwahara added.

Japan's core consumer price index — which does not take into account fresh food prices — increased 0.9 percent on year in November, the 11th consecutive month a rise was recorded.

The metric is forecast to grow by the same level in December, according to a Reuters poll. December data is scheduled to be released on Friday.

When both food and energy prices are excluded, however, consumer prices rose just 0.3 percent in November.

Given those figures, "it's very hard to believe [the] BOJ will send any signal that they will change the policy anytime soon," Kazuo Momma, executive economist at Mizuho Research Institute told CNBC's "The Rundown."


Reference: CNBC

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