Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
The Bank of Japan policy announcement is due on July 31. Timing remains tentative, but it is usually out around 10-11am SGT. Expectations are for the BOJ to move ahead with further policy normalization.
Japan’s inflation accelerated for a second month in June, with consumer prices excluding fresh food rising 2.6% YoY, slightly below economists' consensus of 2.7%. This marks the 27th consecutive month that inflation has met or exceeded the BOJ's 2% target. The core measure, excluding both fresh food and energy, rose to 2.2% YoY from 2.1% in May, with service prices accelerating for the first time since November. Workers’ base salaries also saw the highest jump since 1993, bolstering the case for rate hikes.
The BOJ has a long history of disappointing hawkish expectations. In several meetings over the past few years, despite market anticipation for policy normalization through rate hikes or reductions in bond purchases, the BOJ has maintained its dovish stance. At the June meeting, when markets participants expected more definitive clues on tapering of bond buying, all they got was a decision to lay out the details of the BOJ’s bond buying at the July meeting. The April meeting had similarly surprised dovish, as we discussed in this article. The BOJ exited negative interest rates at the March meeting, but the language remained dovish and reaffirmed that an accommodative policy will be maintained.
While the market is anticipating significant policy moves, we believe it is unlikely that the BOJ will implement both a rate hike and a substantial reduction in bond buying simultaneously. Two hawkish moves at one policy meeting may be a bit of a stretch for a central bank that is inherently dovish by nature. There are several reasons for the BOJ to keep its pace of policy normalization gradual and modest. We discussed some of those considerations, including macro risks and fiscal sustainability risks, in a piece titled ‘A reality check on Bank of Japan’s policy normalization and JPY appreciation expectations’ earlier this year. Some further, more recent considerations, are listed below:
These reasons suggest that the central bank will proceed cautiously when it unveils its plan to cut bond buying at its policy decision meeting next week. This is the BOJ’s first step toward quantitative tightening after more than a decade of monetary easing.
The yen strengthened 2.4% against the dollar last week as carry trades funded in the currency rapidly unwound. This suggests that market has priced in some amount of BOJ normalization. As such, scope for further yen appreciation may be limited even if the BOJ was to go ahead with the dual move of a rate hike and bond tapering. Sustained yen appreciation, with USDJPY moving below 150, is also unlikely unless there is a significant rise in US recession risks or a sharp dovish turn from the Fed.
Meanwhile, if the BOJ did not meet the market’s high hawkish bar, yen slide could make a return. USDJPY could rise back above 155, and yen-funded carry trades could be back in vogue if BOJ signals caution. Latam FX still remains attractive for carry given that many central banks have halted their easing cycles. In Asia, the Indian rupee also offers an attractive carry with political jitters left behind. Within the G10 FX space, positioning for yen weakness may be considered against currencies like NZD where RBNZ rate cuts have been largely priced in.
Sustained yen weakness is also supported by technical factors, including:
Japanese equities have a significant negative correlation to the Japanese yen, given the dominance of large exporters in the economy and the broader indices. A hawkish stance from the BoJ could therefore initially put downward pressure on Japanese equities, especially if it leads to a stronger yen, impacting exporters. Last week’s 2.4% acceleration in the yen led to a 6% decline in Nikkei 225.
This warrants a cautious stance on Japanese equities. Even if the BOJ remains cautious on normalization, there remain reasons to expect that the Fed will flag a September rate cut with the US economy losing momentum. This could lower the yield gap between the US and Japan’s yields, and lead to a rebound in the Japanese yen which could weigh on Japan’s broader equity indices.
However, structural tailwinds for Japanese equities are likely here to stay. This could call for more active management, with exposures tilted towards:
Clarity on the BOJ’s bond-buying plan would reduce uncertainty on Japan’s rate path and encourage insurers and pension funds to quicken their repatriation of capital on expectation that yields on Japanese bonds will rise.
A reduction in JGB purchases by the BoJ could lead to higher yields and lower bond prices. If the 30-year JGB yield moves above 2%, it will be attractive to life insurers, especially with US treasury yields easing and currency-hedging costs remaining significantly high.
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