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The Bank of Japan may slow down its pace of debt reduction.
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IntroductionMeeting Preview: Interest Rates Likely to Stay Unchanged, Focus on Bond Purchasing PathThe Bank of J ...
Meeting Preview: Interest Rates Likely to Stay Unchanged,Which country has a large foreign exchange trading market Focus on Bond Purchasing Path
The Bank of Japan will hold a highly anticipated monetary policy meeting this week. According to a survey of 53 Bank of Japan observers by the media, the market broadly expects the bank to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.5% during the June policy meeting, but discussions may revolve around slowing the pace of government bond purchases.
After several rounds of reducing bond purchases, the debt market is closely watching whether the central bank will adjust its policy pace due to market volatility or uncertain economic prospects. More than two-thirds of surveyed analysts believe that the Bank of Japan will begin to slow the reduction of bond purchases in the second quarter of 2025.
Shift from Easing to Normalization, Bond Purchase Reduction Attracts Attention
Since March last year, when the Bank of Japan officially ended the negative interest rate policy and abolished the long-standing Yield Curve Control (YCC) framework, the policy has gradually transitioned towards "normalization." The following summer, the Bank of Japan initiated a phased approach to compress the scale of bond purchases.
Central bank data shows that in just the first quarter of 2024, the total amount of government bonds held by the Bank of Japan decreased by 6.2 trillion yen from its historical peak due to bond sales and maturities, marking the largest quarterly decline on record.
Nevertheless, the Bank of Japan remains one of the main holders of Japanese government bonds. As of now, it still holds about half of the outstanding government bonds, a proportion that is extremely rare among global central banks.
Reduction Pace May Slow, Market Pricing Becomes Cautious
Since August 2023, the Bank of Japan has reduced the bond purchase scale by 400 billion yen each quarter. If the current pace is maintained, by the first quarter of 2026, the monthly bond purchase amount will have been reduced from about 6 trillion yen in the early stages of quantitative easing to about 3 trillion yen, nearly halving the scale.
However, faced with slowing domestic inflation and increased global economic uncertainty, some observers expect that the Bank of Japan may adjust its pace in the coming quarters to balance the delicate relationship between market stability and monetary policy normalization.
Market participants note that although interest rates are almost certainly set to remain unchanged, the policy statement from this meeting, the communication strategy on bond purchase reduction, and the outlook on the economy will be key points of interest for investors.
Proceed with Caution, Adjust Flexibly
Bank of Japan officials have repeatedly emphasized that policy adjustments will remain gradual and flexible until the path of inflation and wage growth remain stable. Since inflation has not yet fully returned to the stable target range of 2% and yen exchange rate fluctuations have intensified, policymakers may prefer to maintain policy flexibility.
Analysts believe that if global market volatility intensifies in the future or Japan's domestic economic recovery slows, the Bank of Japan might reassess the tightening pace and postpone further bond purchase reductions.
Risk Warning and DisclaimerThe market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.
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