QuoMarkets

Japan Raised Rates To Levels Your Trading Platform Has Never Seen Before

The Bank of Japan moves to cool inflation driven by the Iran war energy shock, even as its own governor sits out the vote.

The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark interest rate to 1% on Tuesday – up from 0.75% – hitting a level Japan hasn’t seen in 31 years. The move was widely anticipated, but it still carries weight: this is a central bank that spent decades near zero, now tightening alongside the ECB and others as post-war inflation spreads globally.

Key details

New policy rate

1.0%

Highest since 1995

Vote

7–1

Asada dissented

Wholesale inflation

6.3%

3-year high (May)

JGB monthly buys

¥2T

Taper paused Apr 2027

 

Governor Kazuo Ueda missed the meeting for medical treatment, leaving Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida to face the cameras. The lone dissenter was Toichiro Asada, the first BOJ board member hand-picked by dovish premier Sanae Takaichi, who argued that downside risks from the Middle East conflict outweigh inflation concerns.

Market reaction

The Nikkei 225 surged up to 1%, breaking above 70,000 for the first time on record. The yen briefly firmed, then slid to 160.29 per dollar, close to the line traders watch as the trigger for potential currency intervention by Japanese authorities.

Why it matters for traders

The BOJ’s direction of travel is clear: gradual hikes, roughly once every six to twelve months, without any surprise 50bp jumps. For risk assets, that’s actually a relief; a slower pace removes a major tail risk. But a yen hovering at 160 keeps intervention speculation alive, and with wholesale inflation at a 3-year high, there’s little chance the BOJ pauses anytime soon.

The Fed decision on Wednesday adds another layer. If officials signal a hike rather than a cut, dollar strength could push the yen even closer to levels that force Japan’s hand.

What to watch

Keep your eye on USD/JPY around the 160 level, the Fed’s Wednesday statement, and Japan’s core CPI – analysts expect it to climb back above 2% later this year as government energy subsidies wind down. If the yen keeps weakening, the next BOJ hike could come sooner than the market expects.

Stay ahead of every market-moving headline with QuoMarkets

 

The above content is provided and paid for by QuoMarkets and is for general informational purposes only. It does not act as an investment or professional advice and should not be assumed upon as such. Prior to taking action based on such information, we advise you to consult with your respective professionals. We do not accredit any third parties referenced within the article. Do not assume that any securities, sectors, or markets described in this article were or will be profitable. Market and economic outlooks are subject to change without notice and may be outdated when presented here. Past performances do not guarantee future results, and there may be the possibility of loss. Historical or hypothetical performance results are published for illustrative purposes only.

Share
QUOlogo_RGB_S

Thank you for visiting
QuoMarkets.com

I confirm that I am interested in visiting this website without prior solicitation and have not received any prohibited direct marketing activity in my country of residence.
Quomarkets and its affiliated entities do not operate in your home jurisdiction.
You wish to obtain information from this website based on reverse solicitation principles in accordance with the applicable laws of your home jurisdiction.

Your answer does not comply with visiting our website.