Inflation Drifts Further From Target
With Japan’s year-over-year CPI falling to 1.3% in February, we see that inflation is once again moving away from the Bank of Japan’s 2% target. This fresh data significantly dampens any expectation of monetary policy tightening in the near term. For us, this signals that the central bank will have to maintain its dovish stance for longer than anticipated. This situation makes shorting the Japanese Yen an attractive strategy again, reversing the brief trend we saw in late 2025 when the market was pricing in policy normalization. The interest rate differential between Japan and other major economies, particularly the U.S., is set to remain wide. We should consider buying call options on the USD/JPY pair, as it has already climbed back above the 152 level this month. A weaker yen directly benefits Japan’s export-heavy stock market, making their goods more competitive globally. This provides a strong tailwind for corporate earnings and pushes the Nikkei 225 index higher. The Nikkei has already rallied over 3% in March alone, and we should look at buying index futures or calls to capture further upside. The disinflationary pressure also means the Bank of Japan will continue to suppress government bond yields. The BoJ’s recent meeting minutes already confirmed its commitment to the -0.1% policy rate until inflation is sustainably achieved.Japanese Yields Likely To Stay Anchored
This reinforces the case for using interest rate swaps to bet on Japanese yields remaining anchored at historic lows. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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