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Zusammenfassung:Recently, the dynamics of Japans economy and financial markets have attracted widespread attention. The Bank of Japans hawkish remarks and continued high inflation are pushing Japanese bond yields to
Recently, the dynamics of Japan's economy and financial markets have attracted widespread attention. The Bank of Japan's hawkish remarks and continued high inflation are pushing Japanese bond yields to multi-year highs, and have also triggered market expectations of rising interest rate hikes. This series of changes has not only shaken the market's previous general belief that Japan's economy will not raise interest rates significantly due to severe deflation, but has also had a significant impact on the yen exchange rate.
Earlier on Friday, data showed that Japan's core CPI accelerated to its highest level since June 2023 in January, exceeding market expectations. The overall CPI including fresh food jumped to 4% year-on-year, a two-year high, and the core index excluding energy also climbed to 2.5% year-on-year, indicating that price pressures are spreading from the energy sector to the broader economic sector. After the data was released, Japan's benchmark government bond yield hit a 15-year high.
Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities released a forecast on Monday that the Bank of Japan is expected to raise interest rates from the current 0.5% to 0.75% in July, which is much earlier than the previous forecast of October to December. Given the Bank of Japan's growing concern about the risk of excessive inflation, there is a possibility of a rate hike at the meeting on April 30-May 1. And the recent rise in Japanese bond yields suggests that “the next rate hike by the Bank of Japan may come sooner than expected, and the market may have begun to price it in.” As the market reassesses the Bank of Japan's rate hike path, Japanese government bond yields have risen significantly.
The benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yield rose 2.5 basis points to 1.375%, the highest level since 2010, while the 5-year Japanese government bond yield also rose 3.5 basis points to 1.040%, the highest level since 2008. Japan's strong GDP data for October-December released on Monday, coupled with recent persistent high inflation, further consolidated market expectations that the Bank of Japan will raise interest rates in the near term, which also pushed up the yen and bond yields.
Hedge funds are again betting that the yen will outperform other major currencies in the coming months after their long yen trades were tested last week. So-called macro hedge funds, which try to profit from market swings triggered by political or economic events, continued to buy call options on the yen against a range of currencies including the dollar, euro and Swiss franc this week, according to traders. As of Friday morning, there were seven times as many yen-dollar calls as puts on CME's options central limit order book.
Makoto Sakurai, a former Bank of Japan board member who maintains close ties with current policymakers, said the central bank is expected to raise interest rates to at least 1.5% over the next two years. The International Monetary Fund sees Japan's natural rate of interest at between 1% and 2%, with a median of 1.5%, and predicts the Bank of Japan will raise rates to around that level by the end of 2027. Asset managers' views on the yen have taken their most positive turn since March 2021. Data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) for the week ended Feb. 11 showed asset managers' net long yen positions at the highest level in about four years.
Still, the yen faces headwinds from Japanese retail investors‘ thirst for overseas stocks and Japan’s negative real interest rates. In addition, investors are getting more creative in how they bet on diverging interest rate trends in major economies, looking for ways to avoid dollar fluctuations and instead fund bets on the yen with European currencies. The uncertainty that Trump‘s trade tariff plans have brought to the market is testing dollar-based strategies, and investors are questioning whether Trump’s proposals will be a driver of dollar strength or just a negotiating tactic.
The dynamics of Japan's economy and financial markets indicate that the Bank of Japan may accelerate the pace of interest rate hikes to cope with inflationary pressures. The market's expectations for interest rate hikes continue to rise, driving up bond yields and strengthening the yen. At the same time, investors' interest in the yen has increased, and asset management companies' bullish sentiment on the yen has reached a four-year high. Against the backdrop of increasing global economic uncertainty, the Bank of Japan's policy adjustments will have an important impact on the Japanese economy and global financial markets. In the future, the market will continue to pay attention to the Bank of Japan's policy trends and its further impact on the yen exchange rate and bond market.
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