Business

Bank of Japan holds negative rates, tweaks easing policy

BoJ also drops intervention target for Tokyo stock market, allowing for more purchasing flexibility

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 19 Mar 2021 11:30PM

Bank of Japan holds negative rates, tweaks easing policy
Analysts say the Bank of Japan maintaining its negative interest rate while tweaking its monetary easing programme is aimed at giving itself more room to manoeuvre. – Konosuke Urata pic, March 19, 2021

TOKYO – The Bank of Japan today maintained its negative interest rate and tweaked its monetary easing programme as it battles to boost inflation and shore up the pandemic-hit economy.

The adjustment, which marginally expands the fluctuation in long-term rates for 10-year bonds that the bank will accept, is seen as a potential forerunner to further tweaks in policy.

The bank also said it would allow more flexibility in its stock purchases, dropping a target for its intervention in the Tokyo stock market, which has strongly recovered since crashing in spring 2020 as the pandemic began to bite.

The bank’s policies were otherwise largely left untouched after its two-day meeting, with an interest rate of -0.1% left intact, as well as an annual ceiling on stock purchases. Tokyo’s Nikkei index tumbled 1.5% with selling picking up after the announcement.

The central bank is attempting to tailor its policies to respond to the pandemic and keep on track towards its long-standing goal of 2% inflation, which remains far from sight.

“It is important to strike an appropriate balance between maintaining market functioning and controlling interest rates by allowing interest rates to fluctuate to a certain degree,” it said.

“For the time being, the bank will closely monitor the impact of Covid-19 and will not hesitate to take additional easing measures if necessary,” it added.

Despite a spike in infections this winter, Japan has seen a comparatively small outbreak overall with around 8,700 deaths, and has avoided imposing the blanket lockdowns seen in other countries.

At its last meeting in January, the BoJ revised its growth outlook upwards for the next two years, even as it warned that the pandemic makes forecasts more difficult.

Analysts said the bank was giving itself slightly more flexibility.

The decisions are about paving the way for “more accommodation in the form of rate cuts if necessary, and removing unnecessary restrictions that they had placed on themselves,” said Stephen Innes, chief global markets strategist at Axi

“They’ve also put in provisions to allow themselves to handle rate rises as well. It seems fairly balanced on the whole,” he wrote in a note.

Tom Learmouth, Japan economist at Capital Economics, said the bank was rearranging “the furniture to prepare for (a) prolonged hold.”

He expects the bank policies to stay unchanged “for the foreseeable future” and said neither the new fluctuation band for long-term yields nor the removal of guidance for stock purchases would have much effect immediately. – AFP, March 19, 2021

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