Ueda’s comments ignited the Japanese Government Bond and currency markets – the yen scored its biggest rise in two months and the 10-year JGB yield leaped to its highest in almost 10 years, scaling 0.70% for the first time since January 2014.
Analysts at Barclays reckon BOJ officials could flesh out more of their thinking at next week’s policy meeting, while Deutsche Bank economists radically changed their BOJ forecasts.
They now expect the central bank’s ‘yield curve control’ policy to end in October, compared with April 2024, and for the negative interest rate policy to end in January 2024, versus December 2024.
The prospect of a radically different – that is, far more hawkish – monetary policy stance in the world’s third largest economy has reverberations far beyond Japan’s domestic markets, especially in foreign exchange.
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