Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate and unveiled a plan for reducing its bond-buying. While these policy normalization steps were anticipated by the markets, as discussed in our preview note, the BOJ’s delivery of these measures is still a hawkish outcome, considering its tendency to disappoint on hawkish expectations.
The BOJ raised its target for the unsecured overnight call rate to around 0.25%, a significant shift from the previous range of 0%-0.1%. The move was leaked ahead of the announcement, with Japanese media carrying reports overnight of BOJ considering raising the policy rate to 0.25%. Still, the BOJ delivering on a leak cannot be taken for granted.
This makes the central bank’s rate hike still a hawkish surprise, and aligns with Governor Kazuo Ueda’s focus on solid inflation numbers despite signs of slack demand in the economy. The central bank also said that it will raise rates further if inflation continues to follow its projections, and Governor Ueda's comments that 0.5% is not a rate limit were particularly hawkish and a significant shift in BOJ's stance.
In its quarterly outlook, the BOJ maintained its view that inflation will stay near its 2% target. The central bank expects core consumer inflation, excluding volatile fresh food prices, to reach 2.5% for the fiscal year ending March 2025 (FY24), down from a previous forecast of 2.8%. Projections for core consumer prices in the fiscal years ending March 2026 (FY25) was however raised to 2.1% from 1.9%, while that for fiscal year ending March 2027 (FY 26) was left unchanged at 1.9%. The board assessed the risks are tilted to the upside on its inflation forecasts for FY24 and FY25. Three months earlier, they had said the risks were balanced.
Additionally, the BOJ forecasted the Japanese economy to expand by 0.6% in the current fiscal year, down from an earlier prediction of 0.8%, with 1.0% growth expected for the subsequent two years.
The BOJ also announced a reduction in its monthly Japanese Government Bond (JGB) purchases. Starting in August-September, the monthly purchase amount will decrease to ¥5.3 trillion from ¥5.7 trillion in July and ¥6 trillion currently. The BOJ plans to continue tapering by ¥400 billion each quarter, aiming to reach a monthly pace of about ¥3 trillion by the first quarter of 2026. This move is part of a broader plan to gradually reduce the central bank’s bond-buying program.
The bond-buying tapering appears more modest than expected, with reductions of ¥400 billion per quarter compared to the market's expectation of ¥1 trillion per month (or, ¥3 trillion per quarter). This took some of the hawkish impact out of the announcement today.
Nonetheless, the BOJ’s clear plan and established review timelines provide a structured approach to reducing its bond-buying program. This reduces uncertainty on Japan’s rate path, and may still prove to be attractive to insurers and pension funds to quicken their repatriation of capital as Treasury yields slip lower and currency hedging costs rise.
The BOJ’s announcement wasn’t hawkish enough to markedly strengthen the yen, but it also didn’t provide substantial reasons to maintain a bearish stance on the currency. The timing of the BOJ’s rate hike appears strategic, particularly if it aligns with indications from the Federal Reserve about potential rate cuts. With the BOJ’s move offering some support, the yen could be more prone to gain in response to the Fed’s dovish tilt.
USDJPY could peak at 155 if the Fed indicates a September rate cut. Conversely, upside pressures will resurface only if U.S. economic data shows re-acceleration. Risk-reward is however now tilted lower given the Fed is likely to start cutting rates. A break of the 200-day moving average at 151.62 in USDJPY could be key to watch, and a move towards 150 could risk another round of unwinding in carry trades, similar to what we saw last week, further influencing the yen’s trajectory.
Although the BOJ's hawkish stance wasn't enough to drive yen gains, it has positioned the yen to potentially benefit if the Federal Reserve adopts a dovish approach. This continues to warrant a cautious approach on Japanese equities, as highlighted earlier in the preview note, given that the index heavyweights could be negatively impacted by any yen strength coming in on the back of Fed’s easing.
However, structural tailwinds for Japanese equities are likely here to stay. This could call for more active management, with exposures tilted towards:
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