The head of the Bank of Japan said the bank will act decisively in the event of renewed financial market turmoil, his strongest hint yet at fresh support for the economy that analysts say could involve buying more government bonds or a return to quantitative easing. A government spokesman said quantitative easing will indeed be part of the talks when BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama meet this week, as the government leans on the central bank to act against deflation.
"We absolutely don't have any plan to prepare for exiting our easy policy," Shirakawa told business leaders in Nagoya, central Japan. "We had some developments in financial markets last week. If we experience financial market turmoil again, the BOJ will act aggressively and decisively," he said. Despite mounting pressure from the government, which is worried about the risk of another recession, the BOJ has said there is little it can do beyond keeping interest rates at the current 0.1 % to push up prices.
Asked whether the BOJ could increase its bond purchases, Shirakawa said the bank will take the most appropriate policy action to deal with economic and financial developments at the time. "The financial market is a living thing, so we'll always think of how best to maintain market stability," Shirakawa told a news conference. "We're in a position now to provide ample liquidity to the market." He said he recognised the pain felt by Japanese companies from the yen's surge to a 14-year high against the dollar, adding that he would closely examine how currency moves affect the economy. So print some more money! KT
He said the BOJ held a very cautious view of the economy and shared the government's view that the country was in mild deflation in the sense that price falls are likely to persist.
INTERVENTION NOT RULED OUT
The government has declared Japan to be in deflation and has criticised as too optimistic the BOJ's view that annual consumer price falls will gradually ease and that another recession is unlikely. Hatoyama's government, only two months old and largely untested on fiscal policy, has adoptedthe kind of heavy-handed approach towards the BOJ that previous governments have used to influence monetary policy. But it has been vague on exactly what it wants the BOJ to do. The administration is considering including measures to deal with the recent surge in the yen in an economic stimulus package it plans to compile this week.
Data on Monday showed industrial output rose 0.5 percent in October and manufacturers forecast further rises in the following two months, easing some concern that the economy could slow to a standstill or even contract early next year. But the yen's surge last week is hurting manufacturers' profitability and could derail an export-driven recovery. Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii left markets guessing on whether Tokyo would step into the currency market to stem further yen rises, warning on Monday that he had never said intervention was impossible.
Voter support for Hatoyama's cabinet is above 60 percent but has slipped gradually. The nightmare scenario for the cabinet is an economic downturn ahead of an upper house election in mid-2010. A rebound in the manufacturing sector has been driving Japan's recovery since earlier this year. The economy grew 1.2 percent in July-September after a revised 0.7 percent expansion the preceding quarter.
As the economy weakens, the yen will become a real political football. QE is not far away here! KT
5 comments:
Kiwi Trader, you say:
" As the economy weakens, the yen will become a real political football. QE is not far away here!
"
Kiwi Trader can you tell me what this means,
who is QE is she one of your girls below, or is the melt down approaching the yen dude, you owe it to me to be honest dude,
I read your column seriously,
Cool story as for me. It would be great to read more concerning that theme. Thank you for posting that material.
Sexy Lady
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QE stands for quantitative easing.
This is when one government department lends to another.
This is not the same as a central bank providing liquity to the marketplace in times of trouble, as NZ, OZ and Europe are now doing.
Those adopting QE are UK, USA and Japan. It is printing money and because more of the currency are in circulation it eventually leads to devaluation and
hyper-inflation.
But it takes some time to happen.
Therefore expect their currencies to weaken, as this effect grows.
It is already apparent in the USD and the GBP. JPY weakening is next.
Hard to say what the yen will do against the other QE currencies.
But it will definately weaken against the AUD, NZD and EUR who are not printing money.
You had best consult your pain physician
Japan looks terrible.
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