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BOJ deputy governor Uchida signals readiness to raise rates further - REUTERS

JUNE 21, 2024

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  • Japan's economy recovering moderately, though with some weakness
  • BOJ sticks to view underlying inflation to gradually accelerate
  • Uchida says BOJ's bond taper size will be 'significant'
  • BOJ to hold meetings with bond market players July 9-10

TOKYO, June 21 (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said on Friday the central bank will "adjust the degree of monetary support" if the economy and prices move in line with its forecasts, signalling readiness to raise interest rates further.
"Japan's economy is recovering moderately, although there are some weak signs," Uchida said in a speech at an annual meeting of trust unions. Uchida delivered the speech on behalf of governor Kazuo UedaThe deputy governor also said Japan's underlying inflation is likely to gradually accelerate towards the BOJ's 2% target, as rising wages and prices heighten inflation expectations.

The BOJ ended eight years of negative interest rates in March and has signalled its intention to raise short-term rates further from the current range of 0-0.1%.
The central bank also decided at last week's policy meeting to announce a plan in July on how to trim its huge bond buying in the coming one to two years.

Uchida said the scale of the BOJ's bond tapering will be "significant," repeating a comment made by governor Ueda in last week's post-meeting news conference.
The BOJ said on Friday it will hold a series of meetings with bond market participants on July 9-10 to collect their views, which will be taken into account in deciding on the taper plan at its next policy-setting meeting on July 30-31.
Many market participants expect the BOJ to raise rates again some time this year, though they are divided on whether the timing could come as early as July or later in the year.

Wall Street's main indexes ended mixed on Thursday,

The central bank has also been under pressure to embark on quantitative tightening (QT) and scale back its nearly $5 trillion balance sheet to ensure the effects of future rate hikes smoothly feed into the economy.

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