(Reuters) – The Bank of Japan kept its short-term rates steady on Friday while removing a reference to the amount of government bonds it has roughly committed to buying each month.
As widely expected, the BOJ maintained its short-term interest rate target at a range of 0-0.1%, which was set just a month ago when it made a historical exit from its massive stimulus programme.
MARKET REACTION:
Japan’s Nikkei share average extended gains after the BOJ opted to leave interest rates unchanged. The benchmark index was up 1.06% to 38,028.78.
The Japanese yen fell sharply.
The benchmark 10-year JGB futures fell 0.19 yen to 143.96, but were off the day’s lows.
COMMENTS:
MANSOOR MOHI-UDDIN, CHIEF ECONOMIST, THE BANK OF SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE
“The BOJ stayed dovish at its meeting by making no changes to interest rates or its QE-purchases of bonds. The decision supports Japan’s equities and bonds, but provides little help for the yen.”
NICHOLAS CHIA, ASIA MACRO STRATEGIST, STANDARD CHARTERED BANK, SINGAPORE
“Despite the knee-jerk dip in USD-JPY, the direction of travel for the pair is still north. Intervention risks become salient once the pair closes in on the 157-level, which may be a reason deterring more market participants from chasing USD-JPY higher.
“If the authorities do not step in at 157, then the sky is really the limit for the pair by signalling the all-clear for markets. All in, it is still a dovish meeting with repeated references to easy financial conditions despite the guidance to reduce bond purchases.”
(Reporting by Asian bureaus; Compiled and edited by Vidya Ranganathan and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)
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