BOJ turns dovish - leans on ‘underlying inflation’ to justify slow hikes, messaging murky

  • Data shows services inflation still at just 1.4% in May

The Bank of Japan is placing increasing emphasis on “underlying inflation” to justify its cautious approach to further rate hikes, even as headline inflation sits well above target — a move that’s drawing criticism for clouding its policy message.

  • core and headline consumer inflation in Japan remain above 2%
  • BOJ points to a range of less conventional indicators — including the weighted median, mode, and services inflation — to argue that domestic price pressures remain subdued

These underlying metrics are currently tracking below the BOJ’s 2% target, reinforcing Governor Kazuo Ueda’s argument that policy should stay accommodative:

  • “We’ve de-anchored expectations from zero, but haven’t yet re-anchored them at 2%”

Info comes via a Reuters report. Adding:

  • services inflation still at just 1.4% in May
  • policymakers remain wary of tightening too quickly and stalling a fragile recovery
  • divisions within the BOJ are growing
BOJ Sign

Markets now expect the BOJ’s next 25bp hike may not come until early 2026.

The Bank next meets on July 30-31, new projections for inflation are expected.

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