Bank of Japan policymaker rules out intervention to stem bond yield spike
Noguchi, a former academic regarded as one of the central bank board's dovish members, also said the central bank must pause its interest rate hikes for the time being until there is more clarity on the impact of US tariffs on the economy.
While the outcome of Tokyo's trade negotiations with Washington may become clearer, US tariffs will likely exert 'quite strong downward pressure' on the economy, he said.
'When the outlook is so uncertain, there's no point acting on interest rates,' he told a news conference, stressing the need to put off raising rates for the time being. 'It's important to avoid moving and scrutinise developments.'
While diminishing prospects of a near-term rate hike have kept shorter-term yields stable, those on super-long Japanese government bonds (JGBs) soared to all-time highs this week amid calls from politicians for big fiscal spending.
The spike in yields has led some analysts to speculate that the BOJ could ramp up bond buying in an emergency operation or issue a verbal warning against rapid market moves.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
'Bond yields, at times, make volatile moves reflecting various views on the economic outlook,' Noguchi said.
'At times, central banks must take action to stabilise markets. I don't think we're seeing a situation where we need to do so,' he said, emphasising the need to allow market forces to determine bond yield moves.
The BOJ last year exited a massive stimulus programme that included a policy capping bond yields around zero. It raised its short-term policy rate to 0.5 per cent in January, on the view Japan was making progress in durably meeting its 2 per cent inflation target.
At its policy meeting next month, the BOJ will conduct an interim review of its bond tapering plan running through March and come up with a programme for April 2026 onward.
Noguchi said he saw no need to make any major changes to the current plan. In compiling the reduction plan for April 2026 onward, the central bank might need to take into account how much it eventually wants to trim its huge balance sheet, he said.
'It's true the BOJ needs to reduce its huge bond holdings,' he said. 'But the priority should be to avoid disrupting markets,' to scale back its balance sheet.
Fears of a US tariff-induced global slowdown forced the central bank to sharply cut its growth forecasts at its Apr 30-to-May 1 policy meeting. That has cast doubt on the view that sustained wage hikes will underpin consumption and the broader economy.
A Reuters poll showed most economists now expect the BOJ will hold rates steady through September to assess the effects of US tariffs, although a slight majority still see at least a 25-basis-point hike by year-end. REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
13 minutes ago
- Business Times
China's overcapacity crackdown faces litmus test in solar sector
[BEIJING] China's efforts to curb industrial overcapacity face their first test in the indebted and bloated polysilicon sector, a key cog in solar cell production, where analysts say it is easiest for Beijing to intervene but still difficult to succeed. Under the plan, devised by industry players in the presence of Chinese regulators, big producers will pool 50 billion yuan (S$8.9 billion) to buy out the least efficient facilities and shut them down, then form a cartel to halt relentless price wars. Ideally, when prices rise, the loss-making producers will turn profitable and reimburse the debt incurred in the process. Reduced output and higher polysilicon costs would force solar panel makers – which can produce roughly twice as much annually as the world buys and have been a source of trade tensions between China and the West – to consolidate. But analysts see risks at every stage of this plan. First, it is unclear if the industry can agree who's in or who's out of the cartel. GCL Technology Holdings, one of the biggest producers, said earlier this month cartel planning was close to wrapping up but declined to provide details of the other participants. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Banks – whose incentive to finance this acquisition is to ensure that what they rate as a 'safe' sector doesn't turn to 'risky' – would likely be involved in the process, said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group. Analysts warn local authorities, who have strived to fulfil Beijing's strategic green energy vision by handing out subsidies, tax breaks and cheap land to the sector, may not want the solar supply chains on their turf to shut. 'Which local government is going to let go of their industry first?' said Max Zenglein, senior economist for the Asia-Pacific at The Conference Board research group. 'They're going to be very cautious.' Finally, even if the cartel does form, any success creates the conditions for failure: after prices climb, members might be tempted to raise output and reap the profits. Reformers face all these risks despite the industry having fewer players and fewer supply chain inputs than most other sectors in the world's second-largest economy, where overcapacity is endemic and deflationary, and threatens trade relations and long-term growth. 'Success is hardly a foregone conclusion,' Gavekal Dragonomics analysts Tilly Zhang and Wei He said in a note. If the overcapacity crackdown 'fails to get traction in polysilicon, it will struggle in the many other industries' where the government has less capacity to foster swift changes, they said. GCL's peer Tongwei declined to comment. Polysilicon producers Daqo New Energy and TBEA did not respond to requests for comment. The solar and metals industry associations, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC)- China's state planner – and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology also did not respond to requests for comment. Is everyone game? Over the past five years, the top four Chinese manufacturers alone built about two-thirds of the industry's capacity, which stood at 3.25 million tonnes at the end of 2024, according to Bernreuter Research, a consultancy. In 2025, Bernreuter anticipates an average utilisation of 35 per cent-40 per cent, down from 57 per cent last year. Morningstar estimates about 965,000 tonnes of polysilicon capacity was built or is still under construction this year, citing the China Photovoltaic Industry Association. Past attempts to get the solar industry to self-regulate have failed. Last October, the solar industry body proposed a price floor for solar modules, but the temptation for manufacturers to undercut competitors proved too enticing. The NDRC called for a ban on new production in an online meeting in February. Still, Karamay, a city in the northwestern region of Xinjiang announced a three billion yuan solar module manufacturing plant as recently as May, Chinese media reported. The Xinjiang energy regulator did not respond to phone calls from Reuters. A new 140,000-ton polysilicon manufacturing plant in Qinghai, a major provincial investor, also started test operations in March, according to a trade media report. The energy regulator for northwestern China, which includes Qinghai, did not respond to a faxed request for comment. Pain threshold In the event that the polysilicon cartel overcomes industry and local government opposition, it can raise prices to levels that the least competitive firms in the downstream solar panels sector cannot afford, forcing their exit, analysts say. 'Unless I see a lot of defaults all of a sudden really shrinking the size of the industry, I don't see how this is going to work,' said Alicia Garcia-Herrrero, Asia-Pacific chief economist at Natixis. She said that would test the Chinese leadership's tolerance for a bloodbath in an industry that it had championed as a national priority. The case for protecting strategic priorities also applies to other sectors, from electric vehicles and batteries to shipbuilding, all with supply chains much more complex than solar. 'It's very easy to build capacity to burn money, but then to scale it down and direct that in a healthy manner is much more difficult,' said The Conference Board's Zenglein. REUTERS
Business Times
4 hours ago
- Business Times
Tokyo: Nikkei slips from record high as investors weigh Wall Street lull
[TOKYO] Japan's Nikkei share average slipped from a record high to trade flat on Tuesday, as investors weighed Wall Street's muted overnight finish, raising concerns that markets have advanced too far, too fast. As of 0153 GMT, the Nikkei index was flat at 43,722.21, after rising to a record high of 43,876.42 and also falling to as low as 43,411.99 earlier in the session. The broader Topix also traded flat at 3,121.86 in choppy trading. 'Almost everyone in the market thinks that the market is overheated, so there is a sell-off even from a small negative cue,' GCI Asset Management's senior portfolio manager Takamasa Ikeda said. 'This time it was the overnight Wall Street. Gains of stocks will be limited until the market confirms the outcome of Jackson Hole meeting.' Wall Street's main indexes closed roughly flat on Monday, after struggling for direction, while investors awaited a raft of corporate earnings reports from major retailers for more signs about the state of the economy and the Federal Reserve's annual symposium in Jackson Hole. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up In Japan, SoftBank Group reversed early gains to fall 1.6 per cent, after news that the Japanese technology investor is taking a US$2 billion equity stake in Intel. SoftBank shares have surged 39 per cent so far this month, far outpacing the Nikkei's 6.5 per cent gain. Uniqlo-brand owner Fast Retailing slipped 0.88 per cent. Investors will closely watch the Fed's Jackson Hole conference from Aug 21-23, where Chair Jerome Powell is expected to speak. It could offer more clarity on the US economic outlook and the Fed's policy framework. Central banks' policies will be a key for the Nikkei in the coming sessions, as there is an expectation that the Bank of Japan may raise interest rates at its September policy meeting, Ikeda said. Bucking the trend, chip-making equipment maker Tokyo Electron rose 1.78 per cent to give the biggest support to the Nikkei. REUTERS
Business Times
5 hours ago
- Business Times
Gold holds steady as investors eye Fed's Jackson Hole meeting
[BENGALURU] Gold prices were little changed on Tuesday (Aug 19) as investors focused on the Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole meeting later this week, which could provide insights into the US central bank's trajectory of interest rate policy. Spot gold was up 0.1 per cent at US$3,334.91 per ounce, as at 8.47 am. US gold futures for December delivery rose 0.1 per cent to US$3,379.40. The Jackson Hole conference in Wyoming, set for Aug 21 to 23, where Fed chair Jerome Powell is expected to speak, could offer more clarity on the economic outlook and the central bank's policy framework. Investors currently assign an 84 per cent probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut at the Fed's September meeting, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Gold, a safe haven asset during times of geopolitical and economic uncertainty, tends to perform well in low-interest-rates environment. Minutes from the Fed's July meeting, due on Wednesday, are also expected to provide further cues on monetary policy. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up US President Donald Trump told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday that the United States would help guarantee Ukraine's security in any deal to end Russia's war there, though the extent of any assistance was not immediately clear. Trump said that it was a 'very good' meeting and he had begun arrangements for a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Zelensky after a subsequent call with Putin. The Zelensky meeting came after an Alaska summit between Trump and Putin that failed to yield an agreement. Trump, after the Alaska talks with Putin, appeared more aligned with Moscow on seeking a full peace deal instead of a ceasefire first. Elsewhere, spot silver rose 0.2 per cent to US$38.07 per ounce, platinum gained 0.3 per cent to US$1,327.30 and palladium was down 0.9 per cent to US$1,112.03. REUTERS