By CentralBankNews.info
Japan’s central bank once again widened its highly accommodative monetary policy stance by increasing its purchases of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and its U.S. dollar lending program to support Japanese firms’ overseas activities.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ), which surprised financial markets in January by applying a negative interest rate of minus 0.1 percent on banks’ deposits that exceed reserve requirements, will double its purchases of ETFs to an annual pace of 6 trillion yen from 3.3 trillion and also double the U.S. dollar lending program to US$24 billion – about 2.5 trillion yen – from $12 billion to provide dollars for up to 4 years to support Japanese firms activities abroad through financial institutions.
The latest initiative to boost economic activity and inflation was described as “enhancement of monetary easing” by the BOJ and aimed at preventing international uncertainties, such as the U.K.’s decision to leave the European Union (EU) and slower growth in emerging markets, from leading to a deterioration in domestic business confidence and consumer sentiment as well as ensure smooth funding in foreign currencies by Japanese firms and financial institutions.
The BOJ noted that Japan’s government is currently compiling a large-scale stimulus package along with fiscal and structural policy initiatives, which together with its own measures should “provide synergy effects on the economy.” The package has been estimated at 20-30 trillion yen.
The other planks in the BOJ’s aggressive easing campaign, which goes back to April 2013 when it launched an aggressive campaign to rid the country of 15 years of deflation, were unchanged. This includes a goal of boosting the monetary base by an annual 80 trillion yen and applying a negative interest rate of minus 0.1 percent on some current account balances.
Once again, the BOJ also lowered its forecast for economic growth in the current 2016 fiscal year, which began April 1, to 1.0 percent from 1.2 percent forecast in April, partly due to slow growth in emerging economies and uncertainties associated with the U.K. vote to leave the EU.
The forecast for inflation was trimmed to 0.1 percent from 0.5 percent, reflecting an appreciation of the yen’s exchange rate and a delay in any improvement to inflation expectations.
The BOJ expects consumer price inflation to be slightly negative or around 0 percent due to the fall in energy prices, but then slowly accelerate toward the 2.0 percent target. In June Japan’s headline inflation rate was steady at minus 0.4 percent .
But for fiscal 2017 members of the BOJ’s policy board raised their growth forecast to 1.3 percent from a previous 0.1 percent, reflecting the government’s decision to postpone the planned hike in consumption taxes in April 2017 until October 2019 and demand linked to the Olympic Games.
Inflation in 2017 is now seen rising to 1.7 percent, unchanged from April’s forecast that excluded the impact of the planned hike in consumption tax to 10 percent from 8 percent, but below the previous 2.7 percent forecast for headline inflation.
But the BOJ added that it expects the inflation rate to reach 2 percent during fiscal 2017 and then average around 2 percent thereafter.
For fiscal 2018 the growth forecast was trimmed to 0.9 percent form 1.0 percent while the inflation forecast was unchanged at 1.9 percent.
“Looking ahead, sluggishness is expected to remain in exports and production for some time, and the pace of economic recovery is likely to remain slow,” the BOJ said, with domestic demand slowly trending higher and exports to rise as overseas economies, including advanced economies, strengthen.
The Bank of Japan issued the following statement: