IMF urges BOJ to keep raising rates even as Iran war poses new risks

By Leika Kihara TOKYO, April 4 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund urged the Bank of Japan to continue raising interest rates, even as the Middle East war posed “significant new risks” โ€Œto the country’s economic outlook. The proposal comes amid market expectations the BOJ will raise interest โ€Œrates as soon as April in the…


IMF urges BOJ to keep raising rates even as Iran war poses new risks

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO, April 4 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund urged the Bank of Japan to continue raising interest rates, even as the Middle East war posed “significant new risks” โ€Œto the country’s economic outlook.

The proposal comes amid market expectations the BOJ will raise interest โ€Œrates as soon as April in the face of mounting inflationary pressure from the conflict-induced spike in oil prices, and higher โ€‹import costs blamed on the weak yen.

While growth is expected to moderate, due partly to the Iran war, gradual wage gains will underpin consumption, the IMF said in a statement issued from Washington on Friday after the conclusion of its policy consultation with Japan.

“Risks to the outlook and inflation are broadly balanced” with โ€Œinflation expected to converge to the โ BOJ’s 2% target in 2027, the IMF said.

In the statement, the IMF said its executive board commended Japan’s “strong economic resilience” to global shocks and agreed the BOJ โ was appropriately withdrawing monetary accommodation.

“They noted that as underlying inflation converges toward the BOJ’s target, gradual rate hikes toward neutral should continue” in a flexible, well-communicated and data-dependent approach, the statement said.

“Directors stressed the importance of maintaining โ€‹a โ€‹flexible exchange rate as a credible shock absorber,” it โ€‹added.

The BOJ ended a massive stimulus in โ€Œ2024 and raised interest rates several times, including in December, on the view that Japan was on the cusp of durably hitting its 2% inflation target.

The central bank has stressed its readiness to keep raising rates on the expectation that underlying inflation will converge to its 2% target sometime from the second half of fiscal 2026 into fiscal 2027. Japan’s fiscal year starts in April.

While rising oil prices hurt โ€ŒJapan’s import-reliant economy, BOJ policymakers have signalled their concern they โ€‹will add to inflationary pressures from years of steady wage โ€‹gains and broader price increases.

The BOJ’s slew โ€‹of hawkish communication has prodded markets to price in a roughly 70% chance โ€Œof a rate hike in April.

The yen’s slide โ€‹towards the key 160-per-dollar level โ€‹has also kept markets on alert for the chance of currency intervention by Japanese authorities.

Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama issued a fresh warning against yen bears on Friday, saying Japan stood ready to โ€‹act against speculative moves in โ€Œthe currency market.

“We’re ready to take all available means that are legally feasible, be it โ€‹conventional or non-conventional,” she told an online programme on Friday evening.

(Reporting by Leika Kihara; โ€‹Additional reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

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