|

BoJ Quarterly Survey: 90.4% of Japanese households anticipate price increases in a year

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) quarterly survey in June showed on Thursday that 90.4% of Japanese households expect prices to rise a year from now, compared with 83.7% in the previous survey.

Key quotes

90.4% of Japanese households expect prices to rise a year from now, compared with 83.7% in previous survey.

Japanese households expect inflation to rise by average +13.1% a year from now, median +10.0%.

86.1% of Japanese households expect prices to rise five years from now, vs 82.6% in previous survey.

Japanese households expect inflation to rise by average +10.8% five years from now, median +5.0%.

Market reaction

At the time of writing, the USD/JPY pair is down 0.04% on the day at 162.11.

Bank of Japan FAQs

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is the Japanese central bank, which sets monetary policy in the country. Its mandate is to issue banknotes and carry out currency and monetary control to ensure price stability, which means an inflation target of around 2%.

The Bank of Japan embarked in an ultra-loose monetary policy in 2013 in order to stimulate the economy and fuel inflation amid a low-inflationary environment. The bank’s policy is based on Quantitative and Qualitative Easing (QQE), or printing notes to buy assets such as government or corporate bonds to provide liquidity. In 2016, the bank doubled down on its strategy and further loosened policy by first introducing negative interest rates and then directly controlling the yield of its 10-year government bonds. In March 2024, the BoJ lifted interest rates, effectively retreating from the ultra-loose monetary policy stance.

The Bank’s massive stimulus caused the Yen to depreciate against its main currency peers. This process exacerbated in 2022 and 2023 due to an increasing policy divergence between the Bank of Japan and other main central banks, which opted to increase interest rates sharply to fight decades-high levels of inflation. The BoJ’s policy led to a widening differential with other currencies, dragging down the value of the Yen. This trend partly reversed in 2024, when the BoJ decided to abandon its ultra-loose policy stance.

A weaker Yen and the spike in global energy prices led to an increase in Japanese inflation, which exceeded the BoJ’s 2% target. The prospect of rising salaries in the country – a key element fuelling inflation – also contributed to the move.

Author

Lallalit Srijandorn

Lallalit Srijandorn is a Parisian at heart. She has lived in France since 2019 and now becomes a digital entrepreneur based in Paris and Bangkok.

More from Lallalit Srijandorn
Share:

Editor's Picks

Ripple and Stellar outlook: XRP and XLM rebound as bearish momentum weakens

Ripple and Stellar trade higher as both altcoins extend their recovery after defending key support levels earlier this week. XRP is up more than 2% so far this week, while XLM has rebounded after finding support around $0.177. Improving derivatives metrics and fading bearish momentum indicators suggest the recovery could extend in the near term.

South Korean Won edges up against US Dollar as BoK hikes interest rates

The South Korean Won reflects broader strength against the US Dollar as the Bank of Korea delivers its first interest rate hike in three-and-a-half years, raising rates by 25 basis points to 2.75%. The USD/KRW pair gives back slight early gains and ticks down to near 1,484.68 in the Asian trade on Thursday.

-0.4%: Why the biggest CPI drop since 2020 couldn't buy back a single cut

The June CPI fell 0.4% on the month, the largest one-month decline since April 2020, dragging the annual rate to 3.5% from May's 4.2% and snapping a three-month acceleration streak. Core prices went nowhere, flat on the month and down to 2.6% YoY, both under consensus.