Economic news

BOJ Warns of Inflation Spike in Risk Scenario

  • Risk scenario sees upgrade to inflation, cut to growth forecasts
  • BOJ says wage-inflation spiral risk not big for now
  • Second-round effects may rise on changing corporate behaviour
  • Upward price deviation may affect inflation expectations

TOKYO, April 30 (Reuters) - The Bank of Japan is projecting core inflation hovering around ​3%, well above its 2% target, for two years in a row under a risk scenario of elevated oil prices and a weakening ‌yen, highlighting the economy's vulnerability to an energy shock.

While BOJ said the risk of a wage‑price spiral remains limited for now, it warned higher oil costs could increasingly feed through as firms more actively pass on raw material prices, a complete version of its quarterly report released on Thursday showed.

The rare release of a risk scenario highlights the challenge the BOJ faces in steering ​further interest rate hikes as the Middle East conflict muddles the economic outlook.

"Economic and price developments could deviate considerably from our baseline scenario depending ​on the future course of the Middle East situation. It is therefore necessary to thoroughly scrutinise various risk factors more than ⁠ever," it said.

The BOJ kept interest rates steady at 0.75% on Tuesday but sharply revised up its baseline inflation projections in a sign of its alarm ​over mounting price pressures.

Under the board's baseline scenario released on Tuesday, the central bank said it expects the core consumer price index (CPI) to rise 2.8% in the current fiscal ​year ending in March 2027 and by 2.3% the following year.

The scenario was based on the assumption the impact from the conflict will ease, and crude oil prices would decline from around $105 per barrel to around $70-80 toward the end of its three-year projection period through fiscal 2028.

In the full report released on Thursday, the central bank provided a risk scenario based on the assumption ​that oil prices remain at around $105 per barrel through the year-end, the yen weakens 10% from current levels and stock prices fall by 20%.

Under those assumptions, core ​inflation will hit 3.1% in fiscal 2026 and 3.0% in 2027 before slowing to 2.3% in 2028, the BOJ said.

"It is especially notable that a rise of about 3% is expected ‌for two years ⁠in a row in fiscal 2026 and 2027," the report said.

"This upward deviation in the CPI could become a factor that pushes up medium- to long-term inflation expectations," it added.

The BOJ has said it is watching closely whether the energy-led spike in prices feeds into inflation expectations and underlying inflation when deciding the timing of a rate hike.

DOWNSIDE GROWTH RISKS

With over 90% of its crude oil sourced from the Middle East, Japan's economy is acutely exposed to the effective closure of the Strait of ​Hormuz, a chokepoint for one-fifth of global ​oil and gas shipments.

Surging fuel costs ⁠from the conflict compound high import prices caused by a weak yen, intensifying inflationary pressure in an economy where inflation has exceeded the BOJ's target for four years.

The benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond (JGB) yield hit a 29-year high on Thursday as reports the U.S. is ​considering potential military action to end the Iran stalemate drove oil to a four-year high.

This week's hawkish split vote and unusually ​blunt signals of a ⁠near-term rate hike from the BOJ have heightened the chance of the policy rate rising to 1.0% in June. But the decision could be complicated by the hit to growth from rising oil prices and supply disruptions.

Under the risk scenario, Japan's economy is expected to expand 0.4% in fiscal 2026 before accelerating to 0.6% for both 2027 ⁠and 2028, slightly slower ​from the baseline projections.

Large-scale supply chain disruptions, which are not assumed in the risk scenario, would further ​dent growth and could cause a "nonlinear increase" in inflation, the report said.

Rising oil prices will generate an income outflow equivalent to around 0.5% of Japan's gross domestic product (GDP) in fiscal 2026, with the ​ratio rising to 1.4% of GDP when accounting for price hikes for other oil-related goods, the BOJ said.

Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Shri Navaratnam

Source: Reuters


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