The BOJ will consider to half reduce the JGB reduction rate from 2026

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is considering reducing to half the rhythm of its reduction in Japanese government bond purchases (JGB), starting in April 2026, according to Japan News.

Monthly purchases of the Japanese government bond box have been reduced by approximately ¥ 400 billion each quarter. But it has been proposed to reduce that figure to approximately ¥ 200 billion per month. The Central Bank will discuss possible measures beyond April 2026 at its monetary policy meeting on Monday and Tuesday.

Market reaction

At the time of writing, the USD/JPY torque quotes 0.19% higher in the day to quote in 144.38.

Japan Faqs Bank


The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is the Japanese Central Bank, which sets the country’s monetary policy. Its mandate is to issue tickets and carry out monetary and foreign exchange control to guarantee the stability of prices, which means an inflation objective around 2%.


The Bank of Japan has embarked on an ultralaxa monetary policy since 2013 in order to stimulate the economy and feed inflation in the middle of a low inflation environment. The bank’s policy is based on the Quantitative and Qualitative Easing (QQE), or ticket printing to buy assets such as state or business bonds to provide liquidity. In 2016, the Bank redoubled its strategy and relaxed even more policy by introducing negative interest rates and then directly controlling the performance of its state bonds to 10 years.


The massive stimulus of the Bank of Japan has caused the depreciation of the Yen in front of its main monetary peers. This process has been more recently exacerbated due to a growing divergence of policies between the Bank of Japan and other main central banks, which have chosen to abruptly increase interest rates to combat inflation levels that have been in historical maximums. Japan Bank’s policy to maintain low types has caused an increase in differential with other currencies, dragging the value of YEN.


The weakness of the YEN and the rebound in world energy prices have caused an increase in Japanese inflation, which has exceeded the 2% objective set by the Bank of Japan. Even so, the Bank of Japan judges that the sustainable and stable achievement of the 2%objective is not yet glimpsed, so an abrupt change of current monetary policy seems unlikely.

Source: Fx Street

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