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Japanese investors' patience running thin as BOJ stalls

Agencies . Singapore
15 Jun 2023 00:00:00 | Update: 14 Jun 2023 22:52:18
Japanese investors' patience running thin as BOJ stalls
The headquarters of the Bank of Japan in Tokyo, Japan

For Japan's long-term bond investors, an end to the Bank of Japan's stifling control of market yields can't come soon enough.

Life insurance companies and pension funds in Japan have for months been positioning for an end to the BOJ's ultra-loose yield-curve-control (YCC) policy, by flushing out their loss-making offshore bond holdings and switching into yen. That yen hoard has mostly been held as cash to plough into Japanese bonds when yields eventually turn higher, reports Reuters.

Their patience will be tested again, with market participants unanimously confident the BOJ will yet again commit to ultra-easy policy this Friday, despite rising inflation and a pick up in economic growth.

"We're all waiting for the end of YCC so we can buy JGBs," said a Japanese pension fund manager who requested anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media. "Everyone, pensions and lifers, is thinking the same thing... the sooner the better!"

Speculation over an end to YCC, under which the BOJ defends a 0.5% cap on 10-year yields, has swirled since December as investors prepared for then BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, the architect of the decade-long massive asset-buying programme aimed at lifting Japan out of deflation, to step down.

While bond bears betting on monetary tightening have been thwarted repeatedly by the BOJ's interventions, they also think YCC's end is nigh, given inflation has exceeded the BOJ's 2% target for a year and the policy has drawn public criticism for distorting markets and crushing bank margins.

In interviews and media conferences at the beginning of Japan's new fiscal year in April, many domestic life insurers, including Nippon Life Insurance and Sumitomo Life Insurance, were convinced that Kuroda's replacement, Kazuo Ueda, would tweak or even abandon YCC at the June policy meeting

Japanese banks have ploughed money into overseas bonds, but insurance firms and pension funds have kept their powder dry. A weak yen had made hedging costs on Treasuries and other foreign bonds exorbitant, and low yields and the risk of a selloff in yen bonds should the BOJ move, had made investing at home unattractive.

Insurance companies have sold 1.47 trillion yen ($10.50 billion) worth of foreign bonds so far this year. The BOJ is stalling, keen to avoid the mistakes of the premature monetary tightening in 2000 and 2006. The more it delays a start to policy tightening, the higher the paper losses on idle cash for lifers and pension funds.

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