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Double Down or Stealth Taper: BOJ Watchers Debate Kuroda's Move

Double Down or Stealth Taper: BOJ Watchers Debate Kuroda's Move

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s policy tweaks have either strengthened the long-running stimulus or mark a stealth "baby step" toward normalizing policy. Or both?

The BOJ on Tuesday made adjustments to two pillars of its policy that could be interpreted as steps toward normalization: It said it would let the 10-year yield rise just a bit higher, to 0.2 percent from 0.1 percent, and it cut in half the amount of bank reserves that would face its negative rate of minus 0.1 percent.

On the other hand, it also introduced "forward guidance," pledging to keep short- and long-term rates at extremely low levels for an "extended period of time," though that’s not dramatically different from its long-running pledge, reiterated in June, to continue its stimulus program "as long as it is necessary."

For Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and a former BOJ official, the forward guidance tells the story: The BOJ strengthened its commitment to easing.

"It’s irrational to argue that they’re tightening when the inflation outlook is falling rather than rising," Adachi said. "As long as you believe that the BOJ is still trying to achieve 2 percent inflation as soon as possible, the logical thinking is that this move is easing, not tightening."

Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief Japan economist at Credit Suisse Group, agrees. "When you look at rates policy alone, I think they are adding to easing somewhat because they keep low rates longer than people had expected," he said.

‘Stealth Hike’

Japan’s benchmark yield roared back on Wednesday, rising as much as six basis points to an 18-month high.

Former BOJ board member Takahide Kiuchi, now an economist at Nomura Research Institute, labeled the new, wider range for 10-year yields a "stealth rate hike."

The measures announced Tuesday are "de facto normalization with an emphasis on the side effects of monetary easing," Kiuchi, a consistent hawkish dissenter during Kuroda’s term, wrote in a note.

Hiroaki Muto, chief economist at Tokai Tokyo Research Center, said he saw a clear step away from the central bank’s negative rate policy.

"They cut the amount of reserves that the negative interest rate is applied to, so really, I think they want to stop using negative interest rates," said Muto. "They did it this way to avoid provoking markets. But if they thought negative rates were effective they wouldn’t do something like this. So I think they’re starting to think they can stop the negative rates."

Andrew Jackson, head of Japanese equities at Soochow CSSD Capital Markets in Singapore, said "it’s very hard to quantify but the fact that they are expanding the acceptable band for yields shows it is akin to something like a stealth taper."

Tuesday’s market moves are likely to provide only a temporary reprieve for the BOJ, according to Jun Kato, chief market analyst at Shinkin Asset Management Co. in Tokyo.

"The market is more likely to test an upside to bond yields sooner or later given the BOJ allows wider deviations in the 10-year yield, and the yen will probably strengthen during the process," Kato said. The policy tweak "points to a distant-future exit and thus is a catalyst for yen strength in the medium-to-long term."

--With assistance from Abhishek Vishnoi, Yuko Takeo, Connor Cislo and Yoshiaki Nohara.

To contact the reporter on this story: Enda Curran in Hong Kong at ecurran8@bloomberg.net

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

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