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Kuroda’s Pain Threshold Faces Test as Yen Rallies, Yields Slump

Kuroda’s Pain Threshold Faces Test as Yen Rallies, Yields Slump

(Bloomberg) --

Global financial turmoil is raising the heat on the Bank of Japan, raising the question how much pain it can take before it is forced to act.

The BOJ faces two market-driven problems as the U.S.-China trade war escalates -- a strengthening yen and sliding government bond yields. Its options for responding are limited, both in number and in effectiveness, and would come with unwelcome side effects.

But if the U.S. and China don’t pull back, the yen is likely to get even stronger, threatening BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s quest to return inflation to normal levels. And 10-year bond yields could slide beyond the BOJ’s targeted trading range, calling into question its control of yields and inflicting more pain on banks, which could respond by pulling back on lending.

“Market developments are posing very severe challenges for the BOJ,” said Yuichi Kodama, chief economist at Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Co. in Tokyo. “Among global central banks, the BOJ has the most limited scope for further easing. It’s like they’re trying to squeeze water from a dry towel.”

Kuroda’s Pain Threshold Faces Test as Yen Rallies, Yields Slump

‘Something Big’

The BOJ may have to “do something big” to stop the yen’s rise, but it will want to see the Federal Reserve’s stance more clearly before acting, said Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief Japan economist at Credit Suisse Group. “Chances for additional easing in September are rising rapidly,” Shirakawa said.

Shirakawa doubts the BOJ’s ability to halt the slide in yields, and said the 10-year could go as low as -0.3% if U.S. Treasury yields fall further.

Even before the recent market turmoil, a majority of BOJ watchers said the central bank’s next policy move would be to add stimulus, primarily because Fed rate cuts would strengthen the yen, weakening inflation by lowering import prices and cutting into corporate profits.

Now the Fed is seen as likely to cut rates again, with some investors expecting a half percentage-point move at its next meeting in September, which ends a day before the BOJ’s does.

The European Central Bank also looks set to add stimulus, indicating it could cut rates as early as next month.

The BOJ is low on firepower after six years of extraordinary monetary stimulus, and it’s not clear that it could be effective in stopping the yen or bond yields.

Japan’s Ministry of Finance would make the call on any direct intervention in currency markets, but that would almost certainly draw a rebuke, at least, from U.S. President Donald Trump at a time when the U.S. and Japan are in trade negotiations of their own.

A MOF official said Tuesday that Japan will continue to watch the market with a sense of urgency, echoing language used a day earlier by the ministry’s FX chief Yoshiki Takeuchi. That language indicates an elevated level of concern.

‘Powerless’

The BOJ knows it is “powerless” to halt the 10-year yield’s slide as long as it’s fueled by overseas conditions, and will probably be prompted to act on yields only if the 10-year falls to about -0.25%, said Mari Iwashita, chief market economist at Daiwa Securities Co. in Tokyo.

The 10-year bond yield touched a three-year low -0.215% Tuesday morning before pulling back to -0.185% in late afternoon trade. The BOJ sets its bond target range at about 0.2 percentage points from either side of zero. Kuroda has said the band shouldn’t be interpreted too strictly.

The yen swung to a loss Tuesday after the People’s Bank of China guided the yuan stronger, easing fears of a currency war. The yen was trading at 106.38 versus the dollar as of 4:53 p.m., after touching 105.52 in the morning. Many economists say the yen at 100 versus the dollar would force the BOJ to act.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say

Even with inflation at less than half its target, growth slowing and the external climate worsening for exports, the BOJ has kept its policy settings steady. The main reason -- the banking system is being strained by low rates, which reduces banks’ ability to make a profit when lending.
--Yuki Masujima, senior economist
Click here to read more.

The BOJ is likely more concerned about the yen than 10-year yields, which it could probably tolerate at around -0.3%, said Akio Kato, general manager of strategic research and investment at Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management Co. in Tokyo.

The yen at 103-104 against the dollar could force the BOJ’s hand, Kato said, but its options will be limited. It would be difficult for Japan to intervene directly in the currency market, given global trade tensions, he said.

The BOJ could buy more shares in exchange-traded funds, which would support share prices and, indirectly, underpin sentiment about the economic outlook, thereby supporting the dollar versus the yen, he said.

One problem with letting bond yields slide is the reversal rate theory, Kato said. The theory is that extremely low rates at some point actually suppress bank lending. It’s a potential problem Kuroda himself has flagged in the past, though he said last month that Japanese rates aren’t at that level.

A summary of opinions from the BOJ’s policy meeting last week showed the board members debating the merits and risks of additional action. Afterward, Kuroda said the central bank was “more positive” about adding monetary stimulus. Global markets may let him prove it.

--With assistance from Chikako Mogi.

To contact the reporters on this story: Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net;Chikafumi Hodo in Tokyo at chodo@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Malcolm Scott at mscott23@bloomberg.net, Henry Hoenig, Brett Miller

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