Analysis-Why Japan’s emboldened PM won’t toy with risks of a weak yen

Analysis-Why Japan’s emboldened PM won’t toy with risks of a weak yen


By Leika Kihara

TOKYO, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s landslide election win has given fresh impetus to her economic stimulus agenda but the risk of destabilising yen declines remains one firm check on her push for low interest rates.

The emphatic victory last weekend has emboldened her mandate to boost investment and lower taxes to rev up the economy, all ‌of which could heighten the hurdle for the Bank of Japan to further raise borrowing costs.

The dovish premier may also seek to influence the BOJ’s policy debate by filling bank board seats opening ‌this year with like-minded reflationist candidates, some analysts say, in line with her past calls for the BOJ to keep rates low.

Still, the risk that fresh yen selling could fire up imported inflation, reviving political headaches, is now one of the few barriers to her administration ​getting in the way of BOJ rate hikes, sources and analysts say.

“A weak yen and subsequent inflationary risks would be potential triggers for a faster-than-expected rate hike,” said former BOJ executive Akira Otani. He currently expects the BOJ to hike at its July meeting but also sees a good chance of earlier action in April or June.

“If government executives don’t give negative comments about rate hikes and instead say they are leaving monetary policy up to the BOJ, that could be a sign the government and BOJ have laid the groundwork for pushing up rates,” said Otani, who is currently managing director at Goldman Sachs Japan.

Takaichi is sensitive to how markets react to her decisions, particularly yen and ‌bond yield moves, two sources said.

Stubbornly high food prices, blamed in part on ⁠the weak yen, have hit households and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s approval ratings, costing former premier Shigeru Ishiba his job.

“What’s most important for the BOJ is to avoid drawing political heat for causing unwelcome yen declines, which work to accelerate inflation,” a third source said.

“Yen moves will be key to how soon the BOJ pulls the ⁠trigger,” the source said. The sources all spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter.

YEN IS CRITICAL TO TIMING OF NEXT BOJ HIKE

Under Japanese law, the BOJ nominally enjoys independence although that has not shielded it from past political pressure to expand monetary support for a moribund economy.

The most extreme intervention came in 2013, when former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe hand-picked Haruhiko Kuroda to overhaul the BOJ’s caution over ramping up stimulus.


finance.yahoo.com
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