Japan’s Corporate Service Price Index rose to 3.1% year-on-year in March. This was up from 2.7% in the previous period.
The index measures changes in prices charged for services supplied by businesses. The latest reading shows faster annual service price growth in March.
Corporate Service Inflation Signals Boj Action
The jump in the Corporate Service Price Index to 3.1% is a major signal for us. This isn’t just about import costs anymore; it shows inflation is being driven by domestic services, a key metric the Bank of Japan watches. This reading, the highest in over two decades, heavily suggests the BoJ will be forced to act sooner and more decisively than the market expects.
We should anticipate a hawkish shift from the Bank of Japan, likely at their next meeting. This makes positioning for higher Japanese interest rates a priority in the coming weeks. Traders should consider paying fixed on Japanese yen interest rate swaps or directly shorting Japanese Government Bond (JGB) futures, as the 10-year yield has already started to test the 1.20% level on this news.
For currency derivatives, this data is strongly bullish for the yen. We expect the USD/JPY to come under significant pressure as rate hike expectations are priced in. Buying USD/JPY put options with a one-to-two-month expiry is a direct way to play this, especially as the pair falters around the 148.00 mark.
This inflationary pressure is a negative for Japanese equities, which have thrived on cheap money. Looking back at the market jitters during the initial policy normalization discussions in 2025, we anticipate a similar, but sharper, reaction now. We are buying put options on the Nikkei 225 index, as the prospect of real rate hikes threatens the record valuations we’ve seen this year.