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The central bank also reiterated its view that inflation will slow later this year and a pledge to “patiently” sustain stimulus, suggesting its desire to wait until there is clarity on whether more demand-driven, durable price rise will take hold.
But with inflation exceeding the BOJ’s 2% target for over a year and analysts casting doubt on its view the recent cost-push price rises are transitory, Ueda left room for a possible policy shift by dropping warnings on inflation risks.
The remark could keep alive market expectations that the BOJ could tweak its controversial bond yield curve control policy as early as next month, when it issues fresh quarterly growth and inflation projections.
The BOJ’s decision contrasts sharply with that of the European Central Bank, which raised borrowing costs to a 22-year high on Thursday. The U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday also signalled it was not yet done with its fight against inflation.
The benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yield briefly fell to 0.4% after the decision, well off the implicit 0.5% cap set for the maturity.
Core consumer inflation hit 3.4% in April as rising raw material costs prodded firms to hike prices. Companies also offered pay hikes unseen in three decades this year, heightening prospects of an end to decades of deflation.
In a statement announcing the policy decision, the BOJ said it expects core consumer inflation to moderate toward the middle of the current fiscal year ending in March 2024 due to falling fuel and global commodity prices.
While sticking to his view cost-push inflation will slow in coming months, Ueda acknowledged that inflation was not moderating as quickly as initially thought as companies continue to hike prices.
“We’ve seen the side-effects of YCC subside recently. As for what we will do will depend on how we see the balance between the merits of maintaining YCC, and the demerits,” he said, when asked whether raising the yield cap remained a policy option.
“The BOJ is not in a hurry to tweak policy on the view the side-effects of YCC aren’t so large,” said Izuru Kato, chief economist at Totan Research.
“But it may be forced to act if the yen weakens further and drives up import costs, angering the public. The trigger for a YCC shift could be a sharp yen fall.”
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