WILL FUKUI RAISE INTEREST RATES ?
As Bank of Japan's policy board starts its two-day meeting on 20th February, opinions are divided on whether inerest rates will be raised. The board at its last month's meeting voted 6-3 to keep borrowing costs on hold, with three dissenting members having favoured a rate increase. The central bank of the world's second largest economy ended its zero rate policy last July when it raised the overnight lending rate to 0.25%.
Each piece of economic data since then has been closely monitored and speculations on the timing of next rate increase have been doing the rounds. There are, however, lingering doubts on whether the economy is ready for higher interest rates. The Japanese economy, after growing steadily for about five years, is showing signs of faltering. And, the political leadership has expressed its preference for low interest rates saying that any increase now may hurt the recovery.
According to the latest figures released last week, Japan's economy posted strong growth in the last quarter of 2006 - an annualised rate of 4.8%, highest in almost three years. Consumer spending rose 1.1% rebounding from an equal drop in the July-September period and business spending increased 2.2% in the fourth quarter, following a revised 0.8% increase in the third quarter. However, there are no signs of inflation yet and this makes the central bank's pursuit of a rate increase difficult. Core consumer prices rose 0.1% in December, slowing from 0.2% in the previous month.
As Bank of Japan's policy board starts its two-day meeting on 20th February, opinions are divided on whether inerest rates will be raised. The board at its last month's meeting voted 6-3 to keep borrowing costs on hold, with three dissenting members having favoured a rate increase. The central bank of the world's second largest economy ended its zero rate policy last July when it raised the overnight lending rate to 0.25%.
Each piece of economic data since then has been closely monitored and speculations on the timing of next rate increase have been doing the rounds. There are, however, lingering doubts on whether the economy is ready for higher interest rates. The Japanese economy, after growing steadily for about five years, is showing signs of faltering. And, the political leadership has expressed its preference for low interest rates saying that any increase now may hurt the recovery.
According to the latest figures released last week, Japan's economy posted strong growth in the last quarter of 2006 - an annualised rate of 4.8%, highest in almost three years. Consumer spending rose 1.1% rebounding from an equal drop in the July-September period and business spending increased 2.2% in the fourth quarter, following a revised 0.8% increase in the third quarter. However, there are no signs of inflation yet and this makes the central bank's pursuit of a rate increase difficult. Core consumer prices rose 0.1% in December, slowing from 0.2% in the previous month.
Besides the figures of economic growth and inflation, one factor that BoJ will consider is the so-called yen carry trades. This is a transaction that looks quite simple - borrow in yen (at very low rate of interest) and invest in higher-yielding assets in other markets (such as US treasury bonds). But the build up of positions has been so massive that it is being seen as a source of potential financial crisis. So much so that the G-7 group earlier this month warned investors against making "one-way bets". A rapid unwinding of such positions may lead to huge losses for the investors. And may be collapse of many hedge funds?
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