Standard Chartered says BoJ indicators imply inflation at target and output gap positive, supporting further tightening moves

    by VT Markets
    /
    Apr 2, 2026
    Bank of Japan data released in late March included new CPI indicators that exclude institutional factors such as government subsidies. These measures showed underlying inflation near or above the BoJ’s 2% target. The output gap was estimated to be positive from Q1 2022. This implies actual growth has been running above potential, compared with earlier estimates that showed a persistently negative output gap.

    Underlying Inflation And Output Gap

    The BoJ put the neutral rate range as broadly unchanged at 1.1–2.5% in nominal terms. The comments noted that, with policy still accommodative, the data could support further rate rises, while meeting market expectations for two hikes in 2026 may be difficult. The article was produced using an artificial intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor. New data indicates that underlying inflation in Japan is now at or above the 2% target. We also see that the economy has been running ahead of its potential since early 2022. This backdrop provides a clear justification for the Bank of Japan to continue raising interest rates. This view is supported by the February 2026 inflation report, which showed core CPI holding firm at 2.3%. After the historic policy shift we saw in 2025 that ended negative rates, these numbers give the central bank a green light to keep normalizing. This should, in theory, continue to put upward pressure on the yen.

    Trading Implications For Rate Expectations

    However, we believe the market is now pricing in too much tightening, with expectations for two more hikes in 2026 looking too aggressive. The initial results from the spring “Shunto” wage negotiations, while solid at 3.9%, did not show the same explosive growth we witnessed in 2025. This gives the Bank of Japan a reason to be more patient than traders currently expect. For derivative traders, this points to an opportunity in instruments sensitive to short-term interest rate expectations. We should consider strategies that benefit if the Bank of Japan hikes less than the market anticipates over the next six months. This could involve receiving fixed rates on short-dated yen interest rate swaps or buying payers swaptions to hedge against a surprise. The hurdle for rapid rate hikes remains high, especially with Japan’s significant government debt. Even with a neutral rate estimated as high as 2.5%, the central bank will likely act with extreme caution. This suggests that while the direction is towards tightening, the pace will be slow, capping the upside for both the yen and short-term bond yields. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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