Next week's Bank of Japan move is getting increasingly tricky~



Whenever tensions flare up in the Middle East, oil prices spike right up, and for Japan, that's basically an "inflation accelerator." Japan relies on imports for roughly 90% of its energy, so when oil prices rise, the costs immediately feed into electricity bills, transportation, and raw material prices, naturally pushing CPI higher. What makes it worse is the yen's been underperforming lately—it's already fallen to around 160 against the dollar. This combo of a weak yen + high oil prices is practically the textbook case for imported inflation~

So the Bank of Japan is actually in quite a bind right now.

On one hand, both inflation and the exchange rate are applying pressure, which theoretically gives them reason to lean hawkish; on the other hand, this kind of inflation is largely cost-driven, essentially amounting to "imposing a tax on consumer spending." If they raise rates prematurely, they could easily suppress the already-fragile consumption recovery.

The prevailing market consensus is: March will likely be a wait-and-see, with the real action window possibly coming in April or July.

In other words, the Bank of Japan is currently walking a tightrope—

Inflation and the exchange rate on one side, economic recovery on the other.

One step too fast, and they might stumble; one step too slow, and the yen could continue to languish~

#BOJ # USDJPY
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