Fitch: Japan’s inflation may lead to further BOJ tightening

2 hours ago 9

Fitch Ratings has identified Japan’s persistent inflation as a reason for further tightening by the Bank of Japan (BoJ), and the probability of a BoJ rate decrease after the April 2026 meeting sits at 0.1% YES, unchanged from a week ago.

Traders have priced in virtually no chance of a rate cut, consistent with Fitch’s report on Japan’s inflationary environment. The market for a rate decrease is so thin that just $82 shifts odds by 5 percentage points, indicating no real expectation of a cut.

The BoJ’s position reflects Japan’s inflation rate consistently running above its 2% target, driven by yen depreciation and wage pressures. Fitch’s analysis points to possible further hikes of up to 50 basis points in 2026, consistent with the BoJ’s anti-inflation mandate even as economic headwinds like the US-Iran conflict affect oil prices.

Buying YES at 0.1¢ reflects the near-impossibility of this outcome. For this bet to pay off, you’d need to anticipate a major policy reversal or unexpected economic data favoring a cut, neither of which Fitch’s assessment supports.

Watch for Governor Kazuo Ueda’s upcoming statements and any shifts in Japan’s inflation or wage data. These are the most likely catalysts for movement in BoJ policy expectations.

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