BOJ wins first showdown with Takaichi

BOJ wins first showdown with Takaichi

BOJ wins first showdown with Takaichi

(Corrects to add dropped word in paragraph 6)

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO, Dec 4 (Reuters) – Bank of Japan chief Kazuo Ueda used diplomacy and nodded to the dangers of inflation and a weak yen to sell his plan for a December rate hike to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who only last year called rate hikes “stupid”.

The pitch worked – both markets and Japan’s new government got the message that a quarter point rate hike to 0.75% ​later this month was a near certainty, allaying worries the BOJ might succumb to political pressure to not tighten policy.

However, what is less clear is how the BOJ plans to communicate the longer-term rate hike path – a more ‌challenging task given a lack of consensus on where Japan’s neutral rate of interest lies.

The uneasy truce between the BOJ and administration will keep the bond market jittery, with investors already focusing on what Ueda would say on the pace of further rate hikes.

“I think the BOJ sees a December hike pretty much as ‌a done deal. The more important question is what’s next,” said Mari Iwashita, executive rates strategist at Nomura Securities.

“The yen will fall if Ueda fails to assure markets the BOJ will keep hiking rates. But signaling steady hikes could make the administration nervous,” she said. “It’s a bit tricky.”

FIRST ROUND TO THE HAWKS

Ueda essentially pre-announced a December rate hike in a speech on Monday, saying the BOJ would consider the “pros and cons” of such a move this month.

The comments, which led markets to price in an 80% chance of a December hike, got little pushback from the administration of Takaichi, who has historically advocated loose monetary policy.

Instead, Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said on Tuesday she saw no problem with Ueda’s comments, a sign the government won’t get in the way of a rate hike this month.

Even Takaichi’s reflationist aides gave ⁠guarded consent, including government panel member Toshihiro Nagahama, who said the premier may accept a ‌December hike if the yen stayed weak.

“The BOJ will have to raise rates if the yen’s weakness persists even after next week’s U.S. monetary policy decision,” he told Reuters, when asked about Ueda’s speech on Monday.

The next hike would bring the BOJ’s policy rate to 0.75%, a level unseen in three decades, in another step by Ueda in removing remnants of his predecessor’s radical stimulus.

Clearing political opposition has ‍been the biggest challenge to Ueda’s rate-hike plan since Takaichi took office on October 21, with the premier voicing displeasure over an early increase.

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