BANK OF JAPAN
What’s Happening with the Japanese Economy & the Yen (JPY)?
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) kept interest rates at 0.5%, confirming that the economy is recovering at a moderate pace, although weaknesses remain.
Exports and industrial production are stagnant, while consumption is increasing despite inflationary pressures. Inflation is hovering around 3.0-3.5% due to rising wages and the gradual removal of government subsidies on energy.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda stated that wage negotiation outcomes are in line with expectations, possibly even slightly stronger.
He also highlighted significant uncertainties regarding U.S. tariffs and the global economy, which could impact Japan.
"We want to act before it’s too late," Ueda said, emphasizing the importance of achieving the 2% inflation target to maintain the BOJ’s policy credibility.
What does this mean for the yen (JPY)?
In the short term, BOJ’s dovish stance compared to the Fed and other central banks is putting downward pressure on the yen, as investors prefer higher-yielding currencies.
- However, if Japan continues to see wage increases and stable inflation, the BOJ may shift towards a tighter monetary policy, which could strengthen the JPY in the medium term.
JPY Outlook
BOJ remains dovish, but rising wages and strong consumption could lead to a policy shift. In the short term, JPY remains under pressure, but it may strengthen in the medium term if BOJ changes its stance.
BANK OF ENGLAND
GBP Update After BoE’s Decision – March 2025
The Bank of England kept interest rates at 4.5% with an 8–1 vote. The message was clear: uncertainty and gradual adjustments.
What did the BoE say?
Disinflation has progressed, but wage & price pressures persist.
CPI inflation rose to 3% and is expected to reach 3.75% in Q3 2025.
Significant risks remain from U.S. tariffs, geopolitics, and Germany.
Growth is slightly better, but the labor market remains weak.
What does this mean for GBP?
No rate cuts ➜ Positive for the pound.
BoE remains cautious ➜ Still hawkish.
Uncertainty keeps markets on edge but supports high-yield currencies like GBP.
Conclusion: The pound remains resilient as long as the BoE does not clearly shift towards rate cuts.
- Short-term levels:
$GBPUSD finds support around 1.2900 and resistance near 1.3000.
Key things to watch:
- UK inflation & wage data
- Potential Fed stance shift
- U.S. tariff developments – April 2
Posted Using INLEO