
BOJ to slow pace of bond taper next year as fresh risks emerge
TOKYO :The Bank of Japan kept interest rates steady on Tuesday and decided to decelerate the pace of its balance sheet drawdown next year, signaling its preference to move cautiously in removing remnants of its massive, decade-long stimulus.
The decision came as an escalating Middle East conflict and U.S. tariffs complicate the BOJ's task of raising still-low interest rates and reducing a balance sheet that has ballooned to roughly the size of Japan's economy.
Markets are focusing on how BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda will balance U.S. tariff risks and domestic inflationary pressure in his post-meeting briefing, for clues on how soon the central bank could resume interest rate hikes.
In a widely expected move, the BOJ maintained short-term interest rates at 0.5 per cent by a unanimous vote at its two-day policy meeting that ended on Tuesday.
The central bank also made no changes to an existing bond tapering plan, under which it will reduce government bond purchases by 400 billion yen ($2.76 billion) per quarter so that monthly buying slows to around 3 trillion yen by March 2026.
However, in an extended quantitative tightening (QT) plan decided on Tuesday, the BOJ will halve the quarterly reduction amount from fiscal 2026 so that monthly purchases fall to around 2 trillion yen by March 2027.
Board member Naoki Tamura dissented on that particular decision, calling instead for the BOJ to keep reducing purchases by 400 billion yen per quarter during fiscal 2026.
The slower balance sheet drawdown signals the BOJ's concerns about disrupting markets in the wake of last month's spike in super-long government bond yields.
The quarterly taper size aligns with requests the BOJ received from several bond market players in meetings held last month.
The BOJ said it will conduct an interim review of the fiscal 2026 taper programme at its policy meeting in June next year.
"In case long-term interest rates rise rapidly, the BOJ will respond nimbly, such as by increasing its bond purchases," the central bank said in a statement.
The BOJ ended its yield curve control and began tapering its huge bond buying last year. It also raised short-term rates to 0.5 per cent in January on the view Japan was making progress towards durably achieving its 2 per cent inflation target.
The BOJ's policy normalisation is at a crossroads as steep U.S. tariffs hurt Japan's export-heavy economy, forcing the board to cut its growth and inflation forecasts on May 1.
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to push ahead with trade talks on Monday, but failed to achieve a breakthrough that would cut or eliminate tariffs that threaten to hobble the export-reliant economy.
The escalating conflict between Iran and Israel adds to headaches for policymakers as it could muddle the price outlook by boosting crude oil prices and heightening market volatility.
But delaying rate hikes for too long could leave the BOJ behind the curve in dealing with inflationary pressure, as firms continue to pass on rising raw material and labour costs.
Japan's core consumer inflation hit a more than two-year high of 3.5 per cent in April, well exceeding the BOJ's 2 per cent target, due to a 7.0 per cent surge in food prices that adds to prospects of steady wage hikes by firms faced with intensifying labour shortages.
BOJ policymakers, including Ueda, have said the bank remains ready to keep raising rates provided the economic recovery resumes and underlying inflation sustainably holds around the bank's 2 per cent target.
($1 = 144.9100 yen)
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