Zürcher Nachrichten - Bank of Japan keeps easing despite global rate hikes

EUR -
AED 3.77821
AFN 75.090387
ALL 98.182709
AMD 409.487744
ANG 1.853566
AOA 940.680458
ARS 1070.564367
AUD 1.653789
AWG 1.854109
AZN 1.749565
BAM 1.95269
BBD 2.076613
BDT 125.22181
BGN 1.954833
BHD 0.387652
BIF 3009.777147
BMD 1.028632
BND 1.406474
BOB 7.106683
BRL 6.216744
BSD 1.028472
BTN 88.885456
BWP 14.434943
BYN 3.365773
BYR 20161.18663
BZD 2.06593
CAD 1.475094
CDF 2916.171527
CHF 0.939453
CLF 0.037503
CLP 1034.947991
CNY 7.541004
CNH 7.559334
COP 4415.86562
CRC 516.782082
CUC 1.028632
CUP 27.258747
CVE 110.473317
CZK 25.230391
DJF 182.808411
DKK 7.46015
DOP 63.464969
DZD 139.76949
EGP 51.875249
ERN 15.42948
ETB 129.917339
FJD 2.39167
FKP 0.847168
GBP 0.842228
GEL 2.921366
GGP 0.847168
GHS 15.275182
GIP 0.847168
GMD 74.06188
GNF 8903.838003
GTQ 7.939434
GYD 215.077503
HKD 8.010826
HNL 26.20991
HRK 7.590839
HTG 134.327398
HUF 411.458447
IDR 16836.699531
ILS 3.71043
IMP 0.847168
INR 88.904047
IQD 1347.507882
IRR 43292.542199
ISK 144.882873
JEP 0.847168
JMD 160.763994
JOD 0.729609
JPY 161.028252
KES 133.205446
KGS 89.953147
KHR 4156.701334
KMF 491.917539
KPW 925.768888
KRW 1497.086445
KWD 0.317364
KYD 0.857031
KZT 545.43673
LAK 22444.749512
LBP 92113.993354
LKR 304.048778
LRD 194.940606
LSL 19.48181
LTL 3.037283
LVL 0.62221
LYD 5.096881
MAD 10.355267
MDL 19.315148
MGA 4839.713586
MKD 61.52794
MMK 3340.956517
MNT 3495.291547
MOP 8.250022
MRU 40.990859
MUR 48.222063
MVR 15.846103
MWK 1785.705246
MXN 21.08569
MYR 4.627824
MZN 65.739573
NAD 19.482234
NGN 1600.032681
NIO 37.781567
NOK 11.654179
NPR 142.21791
NZD 1.832832
OMR 0.396025
PAB 1.028462
PEN 3.874341
PGK 4.07542
PHP 60.12096
PKR 286.62832
PLN 4.255977
PYG 8115.037888
QAR 3.744992
RON 4.973949
RSD 117.088139
RUB 105.434227
RWF 1425.683912
SAR 3.860114
SBD 8.717846
SCR 15.535634
SDG 618.207499
SEK 11.478206
SGD 1.407205
SHP 0.847168
SLE 23.347691
SLL 21569.898032
SOS 587.866446
SRD 36.110148
STD 21290.604998
SVC 8.99867
SYP 13374.272871
SZL 19.482369
THB 35.611435
TJS 11.241199
TMT 3.600212
TND 3.312035
TOP 2.409161
TRY 36.474873
TTD 6.986942
TWD 33.898983
TZS 2587.009398
UAH 43.479185
UGX 3798.987294
USD 1.028632
UYU 45.348227
UZS 13352.155558
VES 55.439668
VND 26111.822582
VUV 122.121253
WST 2.88102
XAF 654.914092
XAG 0.033581
XAU 0.000382
XCD 2.77993
XDR 0.792745
XOF 656.787379
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.14482
ZAR 19.327048
ZMK 9258.922862
ZMW 28.565511
ZWL 331.219075
  • RBGPF

    -1.3300

    60.67

    -2.19%

  • CMSC

    0.3200

    23.2

    +1.38%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    6.91

    -0.58%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    11.49

    +2.18%

  • GSK

    0.5600

    32.64

    +1.72%

  • RELX

    0.8700

    46.95

    +1.85%

  • BTI

    -0.0850

    35.635

    -0.24%

  • RIO

    0.1050

    60.485

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    1.3400

    57.61

    +2.33%

  • BP

    0.0050

    31.095

    +0.02%

  • VOD

    0.2000

    8.45

    +2.37%

  • BCC

    3.2700

    126.88

    +2.58%

  • CMSD

    0.3250

    23.525

    +1.38%

  • BCE

    0.2130

    22.753

    +0.94%

  • AZN

    0.1300

    65.5

    +0.2%

  • JRI

    0.1235

    12.22

    +1.01%

Bank of Japan keeps easing despite global rate hikes
Bank of Japan keeps easing despite global rate hikes / Photo: Kazuhiro NOGI - AFP

Bank of Japan keeps easing despite global rate hikes

The Bank of Japan on Friday stuck to its monetary easing policy even as other central banks raise interest rates to tame inflation, but said it would "pay due attention" to forex markets as the yen struggles at a 24-year low.

Text size:

The decision to hold rates at minus 0.1 percent -- part of a decade-old plan to boost the world's third-largest economy -- bucks a tightening trend by central banks globally aimed at battling sky-high fuel and food prices linked to the Ukraine war.

The hikes have been led by the US Federal Reserve, which this week announced its most aggressive increase in nearly 30 years and signalled more were in the pipeline.

The European Central Bank also plans to start a series of rate increases next month, the first in more than a decade, while the Bank of England announced a fifth straight increase on Thursday and Switzerland surprised markets with its own rate hike, the first since 2007.

The widening chasm between Japanese and US monetary policy this week pushed the yen to its lowest level against the dollar since 1998, a cause for increasing concern that even the central bank made reference to after its meeting Friday.

"It is necessary to pay due attention to developments in financial and foreign exchange markets and their impact on Japan's economic activity and prices," the BoJ said, in an unusual reference to forex movements.

After the announcement, one dollar bought 134.63 yen, up from 133.41 yen earlier in the day.

A weaker yen helps Japanese exporters as it inflates repatriated profits, noted Yoshikiyo Shimamine, executive chief economist of Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

For the BoJ, it may be that "these benefits overwhelm the negative aspects of a cheaper yen -- high prices for imported goods, which causes people to suffer without sufficient pay rises," he told AFP.

The bank's ultra-loose monetary policy aims to achieve two-percent inflation, a target that has been stubbornly out of reach during years of price stagnation.

In April, core consumer prices hit the target for the first time since 2015, but the BoJ has cautioned that it sees recent rising prices as a temporary and volatile trend.

Inflation has been rising for months in the United States and elsewhere as buoyant demand for homes, cars and other goods clashes with supply problems caused by Covid-19 lockdowns in China and other pandemic hold-ups.

The problem became dramatically worse after Russia invaded Ukraine in February and Western nations imposed steep sanctions on Moscow, sending food and fuel prices soaring, a particular problem in resource-poor Japan.

Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management said the BoJ may have decided that a potential rout of Tokyo stocks caused by "a hawkish pivot... could see Japanese investors worse off than the current hit to purchasing power via a weaker currency."

The statement on forex is a nod to the government's concerns over the yen's weakness, but "does not, on its own, indicate an imminent change in policy", he said.

T.Furrer--NZN