Summary: FOMC statement will not likely close door on September hike, though economists are more inclined for a December move. There is great uncertainty surrounding the BOJ’s outlook. We suspect odds favor tweaking assets being purchased rather than cutting rates further or dramatically increasing JPY80 trillion balance sheet expansion. European bank stress test results due at the end of the week. Contrary to...
Read More »Kuroda and the BOJ
Following today’s FOMC meeting, the central banks of Japan, Switzerland, and the UK meet tomorrow. The SNB will keep its powder dry to be able to respond to the results of the UK referendum if needed. The Bank of England is also on hold. The outlook for the BOJ is more in dispute. The strength of the yen and deflationary pressures encourage some to look for Governor Kuroda to ease policy. In fact, a little more than...
Read More »FX Weekly Preview: Four Central Bank Meetings and More
A couple of weeks ago, the four central banks that meet in the coming days were thought to be a big deal. Numerous Federal Reserve officials were preparing the market for a summer hike. Risks of a new downturn in Japan spurred speculation that BOJ would ease policy. On the other hand, the neither the Bank of England nor the Swiss National Bank were expected to move ahead of the UK referendum on June 23. Besides...
Read More »FX Week Ahead: Evolving Investment Climate
The US dollar’s weakness in recent months, despite negative interest rates in Europe and Japan likely had many contributing factors. These factors include shifting views of Fed policy, weaker US growth, the recovery in commodity prices, including oil, gold and iron ore, and market positioning. A new phase began in late-April/early May. The dramatic rally in iron prices reversed, and the Australian dollar, bottomed against the US dollar in mid-January, seemingly to anticipate the...
Read More »Kuroda-San in the Mouth of Madness
Deluded Central Planners BoJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda Photo credit: Toru Hanai / Reuters Zerohedge recently reported on an interview given by Lithuanian ECB council member Vitas Vasiliauskas, which demonstrates how utterly deluded the central planners in the so-called “capitalist” economies of the West have become. His statements are nothing short of bizarre (“we are magic guys!”) – although he is of course correct when he states that a central bank can never “run out of ammunition”....
Read More »Negative Rates: Explaining the BoJ’s reticence
You’ll have noticed that the yen and Nikkei were displeased yesterday. Like throw your toys out of the pram because you didn’t get what you wanted displeased. Like one of the worst one day JPY moves in the past decade displeased. What they didn’t get, and what prompted that tantrum, was any auld bit of easing from the Bank of Japan. And here are eight potential reasons why the BoJ disappointed, from SocGen: 1) there is a risk that the market may once again perceive limits to the...
Read More »Podcast Discussing Dollar, Fed, BOJ on Futures Radio Show
I had the privilege of being interviewed by Anthony Crudele, who is trader at the CME, for the Futures Radio Show. There was much to discuss. The FOMC met yesterday. The market, judging from the Fed funds futures see little chance of a June hike. Economists think otherwise. The Bank of Japan surprised many by not changing policy earlier today. The yen rallied. It seems counter-intuitive. The yen rallied when the BOJ surprised at the end of January when it the rate on some...
Read More »Central Banks Roil Markets
The Bank of Japan defied expectations and its economic assessment to leave policy unchanged. The inaction spurred a 3% rally in the yen and an even larger slump in stocks. The financial sector took its the hardest and dropped almost 6%. The yen's surge helped underpin other Asian currencies, especially the South Korean won, which gained nearly 1%. At the end of January, the BOJ surprised by adopting negative interest rates for a small part of Japanese banks' excess reserves. The yen...
Read More »What is the BOJ Going to Do?
Under Kuroda’s leadership the BOJ has surprised the market a number of times, most recently with the move to negative rates at the end of January. It is not that such a move, which has been tried by several European central banks, was without merit. After all, growth and inflation prospects are not very encouraging. The Bank of Japan’s one mandate, to raise inflation pressures, has remains as elusive as ever. The BOJ has already pushed out the time that the inflation target will be...
Read More »The Week Ahead: FOMC, BOJ and More
The last week of April is eventful. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand, the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan hold policy meetings. The UK, eurozone, and the US provide the first estimates of Q1 GDP. Japan, the eurozone, and Australia report consumer prices, while the US updates the Fed’s preferred (targeted) inflation measure, the core deflator of personal consumption expenditures. These events will not take place in a vacuum. The backdrop is an improving tone in the global capital...
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