Based on the latest economist survey data, the Bank of Japan(BoJ) is highly likely to postpone its first interest rate hike until July. Over three-quarters of the surveyed economists believe that by September this year, the Bank of Japan's key policy rate will rise from the current 0.75% (a 30-year high) to above 1%.



Interestingly, the pace set by the Bank of Japan is completely different from that of other major central banks worldwide. In recent years, major players like the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have been steadily cutting rates, while Japan has been exploring the possibility of raising rates. Economists generally predict that the Bank of Japan will eventually raise rates in multiple steps, bringing the rate to around 1.5%.

The issue is—new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's attitude has made the entire market nervous. Since taking office last October, she is famously known as a "dovish" supporter of monetary easing. She has publicly stated multiple times that she has a say in monetary policy and emphasizes maintaining low interest rates for environmental reasons. Just these comments alone have already caused quite a stir in the market.

What’s more explosive is that the Secretary-General of Japan’s ruling party recently revealed that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi plans to dissolve the National Diet next week to hold a snap House of Representatives election. Several of her advisors have also hinted that further rate hikes carry risks. Such political developments undoubtedly add more uncertainty to the central bank’s rate hike plans.

In a monthly survey conducted by Reuters from January 6 to 13, most analysts believe the Bank of Japan will choose to remain on hold. Their reasoning is that the central bank needs time to assess the actual impact of the 25 basis point hike in December last year. Unless the yen continues to depreciate, putting pressure on domestic costs through imports, the bank is unlikely to rush into another rate increase.
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PonziWhisperervip
· 10h ago
The Bank of Japan's recent moves are truly outrageous. Politicians meddling with the central bank can only lead to poor outcomes. Sanae Takashi is insisting on "low-interest-rate environmental protection"? That's hilarious. It's just setting a trap for the market. If the yen continues to depreciate, import inflation will become unbearable, brother. The central bank wants to raise interest rates, but the political climate is pushing in the opposite direction. In the end, they'll have to lower them again. See you in July. For now, it's best to stay on the sidelines.
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MevHuntervip
· 10h ago
The Bank of Japan's move is truly remarkable—politicians are going against the central bank, and interest rate policies have become a pawn. Sanae Takaichi's "dovish" stance—why does it seem like Japan's political arena has no reliable economic decision-makers? Wait, a snap election? The pace... A continued decline of the yen is inevitable, but does the central bank still need to wait? That's a bit dragging. They only raised rates in July; when will it be? The Year of the Yellow Monkey and the Year of the Horse—sooner or later, Japan's independent route will cause trouble. Advisors keep warning about risks, but leaders still maintain easing—typical policy misalignment. Now, the yen bears are getting excited again. Speaking of the 1.5% target rate... slowly moving from 0.75%—how many times does that take? So sluggish. The market is just waiting to see who will be tougher—the central bank or politicians. It might turn into another internal conflict drama.
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BanklessAtHeartvip
· 10h ago
The Bank of Japan is really playing with fire. They want to raise interest rates while politicians are holding them back. Who wrote this script... Sano Takashi, a monetary easing advocate, is determined to ruin the plan.
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