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Bank of Japan set to reduce JGB purchases, stands pat on interest rate

The Bank of Japan is at bottom expected to hold interest rates steady at the end of its 2-day meeting ending June 14, 2024. Seen here, the Japanese swag flying high at the BOJ headquarters in Tokyo.

Kazuhiro Nogi | Afp | Getty Images

The Bank of Japan kept its benchmark rate rate unchanged on Friday, but indicated it’s considering the reduction of its purchase of Japanese government bonds.

The central bank left-wing short-term rates unchanged at between 0% to 0.1% at the end of its two-day policy meeting, as widely expected.

BOJ likely to raise rates next month, strategist says

But notably, the bank bid in its statement it could reduce its purchases of Japanese government bonds after the next monetary policy meeting, appointed for July 30 and 31.

The decision was passed with an 8-1 majority vote, with board member Nakamura Toyoaki dissenting.

Toyoaki was in favor of trim JGB purchases, but is of the view that the BOJ should only decide to reduce them after reassessing developments in economic endeavour and prices in the July 2024 outlook report, slated for July 31.

Ahead of the next meeting, the BOJ said it will meet views from market participants and will decide on a detailed plan for the reduction of its purchase amount for the next one to two years.

Wins of JGBs, commercial paper and corporate bonds will also continue as decided in the March monetary policy union.

Following the BOJ decision, the Japanese yen weakened 0.52% to 157.84 against the U.S. dollar, while the yield on 10-year JGB fell 44 point of departure points to 0.924.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 0.68%, reversing earlier losses, while the Topix was 0.71% higher.

Audacious policy moves

In March, the BOJ raised interest rates for the first time in 17 years — ending the world’s rearmost negative rate regime — and scrapped the yield curve control policy in a radical policy move.

However, the medial bank said at that time it would continue to purchase JGBs at a pace of about 6 trillion yen ($38.17 billion) per month.

While the large reduce purchases of JGBs achieved the effect of stabilizing 10-year JGB yields at around the 1% level, it indirectly put additional heading pressure on the weak yen, according to a note by advisory firm Teneo published on June 13.

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