BOJ secures support for December hike but long-term rate path remains unclear

  • Government backing removes a key hurdle for the BOJ’s December hike and reduces near-term policy risk. But without clarity on the eventual neutral rate, long-end JGBs remain vulnerable and yen volatility stays elevated. Forward guidance at the December meeting will be crucial for FX and rates positioning.
BoJ

The Bank of Japan appears to have won its first major policy test with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, securing tacit government approval for a December rate hike to 0.75%.

Reuters have the opinion piece, I've summarised into a much more concise quick read.

BoJ Governor Ueda effectively pre-signalled the move in a recent speech, and both Finance Minister Katayama and key government advisers offered no resistance, an unusually smooth response from an administration that had previously criticised early tightening.

  • A weak yen and the political sensitivity around inflation helped shift the government’s stance, giving Ueda room to proceed with gradual normalisation.
  • But the more difficult task lies ahead: the BOJ still lacks a clear framework for explaining its long-term rate path, especially with little agreement on where Japan’s neutral rate sits.

The uneasy compromise means markets will remain focused on Ueda’s forward guidance. A cautious tone could pressure the yen, while stronger hints of continued tightening risk unsettling the government. Analysts warn that with the neutral-rate range estimated anywhere between 1% and 2.5%, communication around future hikes may stay deliberately vague.

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