Latest News

Wall Street is poised to gain after BOJ raises bond yields on RPT-Japan bonds

Wall Street is poised to gain after BOJ raises bond yields on RPT-Japan bonds
Wall Street is poised to gain after BOJ raises bond yields on RPT-Japan bonds

The yen and Japanese government bond yields both fell on Friday, after the Bank?of?Japan increased interest rates to an unprecedented three-decade level and left open the possibility of further tightening. The global stock market was muted, with Europe's STOXX600 slipping 0.1% and failing to match the strong trading sessions overnight in Asia and America. Wall Street futures indicated gains between 0.1% to 0.3% after Thursday's rally on the back of stellar results by chipmaker Micron Technology. Investors digested the news that the European Union will provide Ukraine with 90 billion euro ($105.4 billion), over the next two-years, but they failed to agree on an ambitious plan to finance it using frozen Russian assets.

Oil prices rose slightly on Friday as traders weighed up the impact of a possible disruption of oil supplies from Venezuela. U.S. president Donald Trump said in an interview with NBC News that he would leave the possibility open.

War with the Country

On the table. Investors sold the yen in response to the widely anticipated rate hike by the?BOJ, and some profit-taking was triggered. The dollar last rose 1.1% against the yen, closing at 157.3. This prompted traders to think about the possibility of an official intervention in order to support the currency. The 10-year Japanese government bond yield reached a 26-year high and the Nikkei closed 1% higher.

The BOJ?decision of raising short-term interest rates to 0.75% is another step towards ending decades of massive monetary support for the country. Analysts warned that the BOJ would have to take care to control inflation when Japan's new government plans to implement major fiscal stimulus.

Shaniel Ramjee is co-head of Pictet Asset Management's multi-asset division. "Markets anticipate the Bank of Japan to have to increase rates even more," he said. "That extra fiscal expenditure might continue to weaken yen and exacerbate inflation."

Abhijit Suriya, senior economist at Capital Economics, said that he expects BOJ rates to reach 1.75% in 2027.

ECB AND BoE OFFER DISTINCT LEVELS of HAWKISHNESS The wider sentiment was boosted by a surprising slowdown in U.S. Consumer Price Inflation to 2.7%. However, analysts warned that the data had been distorted and should not be taken as a true reflection. The Federal Reserve's pricing moved very little with only a 24% implied rate cut for?January, and 10-year Treasury yields at 4,1471%. This is a far cry from the recent top of 4,209%. British bonds were hit overnight after the Bank of England cut rates, as expected, but only with a 5-4 vote. The policymakers have also expressed caution about the future pace of easing, and another cut will not be fully priced until June. The European Central Bank, which held rates at 2.0%, was even more hawkish and signaled a likely ending to the easing cycles. The markets indicate that there is only a small chance of a reduction in 2026. Gold fell 0.2% on the commodity market to $4,322, still trading below its peak in October of $4,381. Brent rose 0.3% to 60.01 per barrel while U.S. Crude was up 0.4% at $56.35 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)