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Marketmind: All eyes on Bank of Japan's 1% yield cap

A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.

Asia’s economic calendar is jammed with top-tier releases on Tuesday, from Chinese purchasing managers index data to third quarter GDP figures from Hong Kong and Taiwan, but one stands above all others – the Bank of Japan’s policy meeting.

Will the BOJ spook markets on Halloween and the final trading day of the month by effectively tightening monetary policy further with another tweak to its ‘yield curve control’ policy?

It is a huge week for global markets and policy – the BOJ’s decision on Tuesday is the first of three major central bank pronouncements, with the U.S. Federal Reserve coming on Wednesday and the Bank of England on Thursday.

Speculation that the BOJ will act ramped up on Monday after Nikkei, citing sources close to the matter, reported that policymakers may further tweak YCC to allow the 10-year Japanese Government Bond yield to rise above 1 per cent.

The yen rallied strongly for a second straight session, the 10-year yield rose again to a fresh decade-high nudging 0.89 per cent, and the benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index gave back all of Friday’s gains and slid 1 per cent.

It is shaping up to be a year of two halves for Japanese stocks as the prospect of the BOJ abandoning its super-loose monetary policy becomes more likely. The Nikkei is down 3.6 per cent this month, on track for its biggest monthly loss since December, and is down 8 per cent so far in the second half of this year.

But it is still up 17 per cent year-to-date thanks to a stunning 27 per cent rally in the January-June period that saw it scale a 33-year high close to 34,000 points, as many investors bet that Japan Inc was back after years – decades – in the doldrums.

Negative interest rates, the BOJ accumulating 45 per cent of all outstanding Japanese Government Bonds, and a 30 per cent slide in the yen’s value against the dollar since early 2021 made Japanese stocks extremely attractive.

By real effective exchange rate measures, the yen is its weakest in over 50 years, luring foreign buyers in to snap up assets on the relative cheap.

The question now is, how much of that is firmly in the rear-view mirror? And how far and how powerfully might the elastic snap back if a paradigm shift is underway and domestic borrowing costs keep on rising?

Inflation in Japan has finally taken off, and for the first time in decades, appears to be sticking well above 2 per cent.

Also on Tuesday, China’s PMI figures are expected to show that manufacturing activity grew slightly again in October, at the same pace as the previous month, according to a Reuters poll forecast.

After a deeply disappointing first half of the year, Chinese economic data have started to come in above expectations in recent months. Will this trend continue into the start of the fourth quarter?

Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Tuesday:

– Bank of Japan policy decision

– China PMIs (October)

– Japan unemployment, industrial production, retail sales (September)

(By Jamie McGeever)

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