Japan’s yen and bond bears delighted by government’s BOJ surprise



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective mask walks past the headquarters of Bank of Japan in Tokyo, Japan, May 22, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Harry Robertson and Ankur Banerjee

LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Japanese markets reacted with shock on Friday to news that the government had picked academic Kazuo Ueda to be the next central bank governor, but investors quickly snapped up the yen and sold bonds on expectations he will end years of super-easy monetary policy.

Whether, when and how the Bank of Japan adjusts its policy stance is one of the major questions facing markets globally this year, and, in a sign of uncertainty about Ueda’s own view, the yen gave back some of its gains after he expressed support for the central bank’s current position.

The yen jumped more than 1% and hit 129.8 per dollar after reports from , Reuters and others that the government will nominate Ueda, a former member of the central bank’s policy board, as the Bank of Japan’s next governor.

While Ueda is considered an expert on monetary policy, most analysts said the appointment of the 71-year-old was totally unexpected — he was not even considered a dark horse candidate — and could signal a move to phase out ultra-low interest rates sooner than initially expected.

Japanese government bonds (JGBs) fell, with 10-year yields hitting the 0.5% top end of a policy band that is the crux of incumbent Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s trademark yield-curve-control policy.

10 year JGB futures ticked back up a little in the evening in Tokyo and the yen lost some ground to trade around 131 per dollar after Ueda said in comments streamed online by Nippon TV that the central bank’s current easy monetary policy was appropriate and that it should continue.

  GRAPHIC: The BOJ’s YCC faces a reckoning (https://www.reuters.com/graphics/JAPAN-ECONOMY/BOJ/zjvqjwdaqpx/chart.jpg)

The surprise news left investors and analysts trying to parse Ueda’s recent commentary.

“He’s been not terribly positive on Abenomics from the start. From about 2016, he was saying that it had basically failed and the super large monetary easing was causing problems with the bond market, and these sorts of things,” said James Malcolm, UBS’s London-based head of currency strategy.

“I’m surprised that dollar yen is not 129 already. Maybe that’s just a result of people not knowing who these characters are.”

Some analysts thought markets were merely reacting to the fact that Deputy Governor Masayoshi Amamiya, who was until Friday viewed as the lead contender for the top job and had helped frame its ultra-loose policy, hadn’t been picked.

“There is probably a lack of clarity on Ueda’s policy leanings at the moment, but at least it is clear that Amamiya (who is seen as a dove) is out. That removes one of the headwinds for the yen,” said Christopher Wong, currency strategist at OCBC in Singapore.

“The knee-jerk reaction in yen appreciation is more of a reaction to Amamiya being out of the race.”



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