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Free AccessMNI BRIEF: China November PMI Rises Further Above 50
MNI US Macro Weekly: Politics To The Fore
REPEAT:MNI BOJ INSIGHT:Want to Slow JGB Buying But Wary of Yen
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 07:15 GMT Aug 23/03:15 EST Aug 23
--BOJ Wants To Slow 3-5 Yr, 5-10 Yr Purchases But Only If No Yen Rise
By Hiroshi Inoue
TOKYO (MNI) - The Bank of Japan wants to slow the rise in its Japan
government bond holdings to make an eventual unwinding of its aggressive easing
policy smoother but is being extra careful to ensure that smaller JGB purchases
do not ignite a rise in yen exchange rate, MNI understands.
The BOJ has been seeking an opportunity to lower the size of its purchases
of JGBs with a remaining life of 3- to 5-years and 5-to-10 years, returning the
purchase sizes to the levels seen before the BOJ raised them earlier this year
to stem rises in yields, according to sources familiar with BOJ thinking.
The easing of tensions over North Korea's nuclear threat has led to a drop
in bond yields from their elevated levels caused by safe-haven buying. This
provides an environment for the BOJ to lower the size of its purchase of medium-
and long-term government bonds to their previous levels.
However, the BOJ is on guard because it knows that reducing the pace of
asset purchases could easily prompt buying of the yen against the dollar on the
assumption that the interest rate differential between Japan and the U.S. would
narrow.
The BOJ does not want a sharp and fast appreciation of the yen, the net
effect of which would be negative for both the economic recovery and a pickup in
inflation, as any exchange rate rise would trim exporter profits and so tend to
push down domestic share prices.
The dollar has been relatively stable around Y109 recently and Japanese
officials are comfortable if the dollar stays in a range of Y105 to Y115. A
dollar drop below Y100 would be alarming for exporter profits while a dollar
rise above Y120 would also be troubling as it would push up the cost of imports
for households and small businesses.
In keeping with its yield-curve control policy, the BOJ would cut the size
of its JGB purchases with a remaining life of 5- to 10-years if the 10-year JGB
yield were to fall far below the policy target of around zero percent. With
current long-term yields above, but close to, the target, the BOJ would consider
cutting its purchases if market conditions are appropriate.
The BOJ plans to buy JGBs in that zone Friday as part of its regular market
operations for August announced at the end of last month. In its previous
operation in the 5- to 10-year zone last Friday, the purchase amount was left
unchanged at Y440 billion.
The BOJ first increased the scale of its purchases in the 5- to 10-year
zone in early July after the 10-year yield rose to 0.105%, well above the BOJ's
target. It raised the per auction purchase amount to Y500 billion on July 7 from
the Y450 billion level that had been in place since Jan 27.
On July 24, it reduced the pace to Y470 billion after the 10-year yield
fell to 0.065%, cutting it further to Y440 billion on Aug. 16 after the
long-term interest rate slipped to 0.040%.
The 10-year yield fell further to 0.030% on Aug. 18, the lowest level since
May 10. It ended Wednesday's session at 0.035%, unchanged from the previous day.
In the 3- to 5-year JGB zone, the BOJ gradually lowered the scale of its
purchases per auction from Y420 billion in February to Y300 billion on May 1,
but reversed course and increased the pace to Y330 billion on July 12 in a move
to counter a rise in the 5-year JGB yield to -0.035%.
Under its latest policy framework, the BOJ is seeking to stabilize the
10-year government bond yield, the benchmark for long-term borrowing costs,
around zero percent and keep the overnight interest rate at -0.1%. There is no
policy target for other zones along the flat yield curve, though their yields
are meant to fit into the BOJ's view of an appropriate yield curve.
The yield on 5-year bonds fell to -0.100% on Tuesday, a level that is be a
little too low for the shape of the yield curve and thus may prompt the central
bank to eventually consider cutting the size of its medium-term bond purchases
back to Y300 billion.
However, at Wednesday's auction, the BOJ left the scale of its 3- to 5-year
purchases unchanged at Y330 billion because the yield on the 5-year JGB has been
stable and there was no indication at the time of market operation that the
yield would fall sharply. The 5-year yielded ended the day at -0.100%, unchanged
from Tuesday.
BOJ officials believe that market participants understand that the recent
slowdown in central bank purchases of JGBs is due to the stability of bond
yields and that the BOJ is not yet tapering off its accommodative policy.
If upward pressure on JGB yields were to grow due to the influence of
higher overseas bond yields, the BOJ would increase the scale of its purchase of
government debt to rein in JGB yields. Otherwise, the BOJ wants to reduce the
scale of its purchase of JGBs and the stem the rise in its bond holdings, if
market conditions allow the BOJ to do so.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-2175-0040; email: hiroshi.inoue@marketnews.com
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com
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Why MNI
MNI is the leading provider
of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.