I have a few things on my mind this week. We have to talk about Japan and the BOJ. Last week’s decision by the BOJ to raise its deposit rate above zero for the first time in 17 years cements Japan and its central bank as a counter cyclical indicator, of sorts. While major central banks have spent the majority of the past 18 months raising interest rates, the BOJ has stubbornly resisted calls to exit NIRP, despite rising inflation. Now that the ECB, BOE and Fed are on the cusp of lowering interest rates, the BOJ is pulling the trigger on a hike. The BOJ’s decision raises a number of fundamental questions for global macro traders and thinkers. The most obvious one is whether the twin inflation shock from Covid and shifting geopolitics is now pulling major developed rate markets out of their ZIRP/NIRP funk. And if they are, does this mean that the idea of long-term gravity of rapidly ageing population weighing on inflation and interest rates is wrong? Is Japanification now reversing? I am sceptical, but if Japan manages to escape, it would go a long way to falsify the idea of a determinist link between ageing and disinflation.
Read MoreSpare a thought for the Fed. The hope that inflation had peaked in March was brutally dashed last week as headline inflation printed a new high, of 8.6%. A 50bp rate hike this month is now all but certain, with many forecasters looking for 75bp. We could also spare a thought for the BoE. The Old Lady told markets last time in convened that it expects inflation to rise above 10% by Q4, that the economy could well fall into recession, but that it will continue hiking anyway. Or maybe, we should spare a thought for the ECB. Last week, Ms. Lagarde informed investors that the central bank intends to raise rates by 50bp, at least, between now and September, followed by a "sustained and gradual" rate hikes. Yields and spreads rose on the day, likely more than the ECB would have expected, let alone liked, and the euro weakened. The central bank we shouldn't spare a thought for, however, is the BOJ, apparently.
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