Why Investors Must Pay Attention: BOJ’s Hawkish Moves Could Roil Global Markets

Why Investors Must Pay Attention: BOJ’s Hawkish Moves Could Roil Global Markets

Bonds
Althea Spinozzi

Head of Fixed Income Strategy

Summary:

  • The BOJ is comfortable with higher long-end rates as long as real long-term interest rates remain negative, maintaining monetary easing effects.
  •  This suggests the BOJ is okay with 10-year JGB yields moving toward 2%, likely prompting Japanese investors to sell U.S. and European bonds in the near future.
  • This selling pressure can increase global yields and lower bond prices, challenging stock market valuations due to higher borrowing costs, increased discount rates, economic slowdown fears, and sector-specific pressures, particularly in interest rate-sensitive industries like real estate, utilities and technology.

BOJ’s Recent Monetary Policy Shifts:

  1. Rate Hike: The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has increased its policy-rate guidance from "around 0 to 0.1%" to "around 0.25%."
  2. Quantitative Tightening (QT): The BOJ announced a tapering of Japan government bonds (JGB) purchases. Gross purchases in 2024 will total ¥66.1 trillion, the lowest in 11 years, and could drop further to ¥46.8 trillion in 2025.

Expectations and Market Reactions

1. Future Rate Hikes: Another rate hike is anticipated by markets by the end of the year, potentially lifting the overnight call rate target to 0.4%.

2. Yield Curve Dynamics: The JGB yield curve is likely to continue to bear-steepen, meaning longer-end rates will rise faster than shorter-end rates. Currently, the 2s10s JGB spread is just over 60bps, above the historical average of 52bps, indicating further potential for longer-end yields to rise. Since December 2022, this spread has increased by 33bps, with 2-year JGB yields up by 41bps and 10-year yields by 75bps. Rising U.S. Treasury yields have influenced this trend. Despite potential Federal Reserve rate cuts, we expect 10-year JGB yields to remain elevated, supported by global economic recovery and higher long-term neutral rates in developed countries.

3. 10-Year Spread yields likely to rise towards 2%: The BOJ has indicated it can tolerate higher long-end rates as long as real long-term interest rates remain negative, maintaining the effects of monetary easing. As cited in the latest BOJ monetary policy statementReal interest rates are expected to remain significantly negative after the change in the policy interest rate, and accommodative financial conditions will continue to firmly support economic activity”. This implies that the BOJ isn’t overly concerned about 10-year JGB yields rising further, making a 2% yield a possible target by year-end.

Implication for US Treasuries and European sovereigns.

The continuous unwinding of the carry trade can put US and European bonds under pressure. Investors who borrowed yen at low interest rates to invest in higher-yielding assets, such as U.S. and European bonds, might start selling these foreign assets to cover their positions as Japanese yields become more attractive. This selling pressure can lead to higher yields and lower prices for U.S. Treasuries and European sovereign bonds, increasing borrowing costs and potentially impacting global financial markets.

Already, it doesn’t make sense for Japanese investors to buy foreign securities because, when hedged against the yen, they yield a negative annual return. Even unhedged, investors need a strong dollar or euro. With the ECB having cut rates and the Federal Reserve likely to begin a rate-cutting cycle soon, these currencies are unlikely to appreciate against the yen. As the BOJ remains on a path to hike rates, the attractiveness of foreign securities diminishes further, discouraging Japanese investments abroad.

Such shift in appetite can lead to rising long-term yields globally, igniting a bear steepening of yield curve, which could challenge valuation in stock markets.

Source: Bloomberg.

Stock markets should be wary of a hawkish Bank of Japan

As the yen strengthens, Japanese investments in U.S. stocks and bonds are losing value, putting markets at risk. The recent decline in U.S. stock prices exacerbates this problem, making these investments less attractive and more unprofitable for yen investors. Repatriation could cause stock markets in the U.S. and Europe to tumble and yield curves to bear-steepen.

Often overlooked, bear-steepening of yield curves can exacerbate the stock market selloff in several ways:

  • Increased Borrowing Costs: Higher long-term rates raise borrowing costs for companies, reducing their profitability and ability to finance growth.  
  • Discount Rate Impact: Rising yields increase the discount rate used in valuing future cash flows, making stocks less attractive relative to bonds.
  • Economic Slowdown Fears: A steepening curve often signals expectations of higher inflation and potential economic tightening, which can reduce investor confidence in equities.
  • Sector-Specific Pressures: Interest rate-sensitive sectors like real estate and utilities may suffer due to higher financing costs and lower consumer demand.

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