No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

BOJ produces estimates on how future rate hikes affect earnings

BOJ produces estimates on how future rate hikes affect earnings

The Japanese national flag waves at the Bank of Japan building in Tokyo, Japan March 18, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

The Bank of Japan released for the first time estimates on how future interest rate hikes could affect its earnings, which showed it will briefly suffer red ink of up to $13 billion if short-term borrowing costs were to go up to 2%.

The estimates, disclosed on Thursday in a research paper, underscore the BOJ’s resolve to keep pushing up short-term interest rates – now at 0.25% – to levels deemed neutral to the economy in coming years.

The BOJ conducted estimates based on several scenarios, including one in which short-term rates move up to around 1-2% in the course of several years, while the spread between short- and long-term rates move between 0.25% point and 0.75% point.

In the most severe scenario in which short-term rates move up to 2% and the spread widens by just 0.25 point, the BOJ will suffer an annual net loss of around 2 trillion yen ($13 billion) in fiscal 2027 and 2028, the estimates produced by the bank’s monetary affairs department showed.

The loss will then begin to narrow and the bank’s earnings will turn to the black around fiscal 2031, according to the estimates.

The BOJ exited a decade-long, massive stimulus programme in March and raised short-term rates to 0.25% in July on the view Japan was on the cusp of sustainably achieving its 2% inflation target.

Governor Kazuo Ueda has signaled a readiness to keep raising rates to levels that neither cools nor overheats growth – seen by analysts as being somewhere around 1% – in coming years if Japan continues to make progress in hitting its price goal.

Central banks typically reap profits when they are loosening monetary policy, as the yield they earn from their government bond holdings exceed the interest they pay to excess reserves.

By contrast, their earnings come under pressure when they tighten policy because they must pay higher interest to excess reserves to mop up money from the market.

Having expanded its balance sheet to near 800 trillion yen during years of heavy asset purchases, the BOJ reaped a record recurring profit of 4.6 trillion yen in fiscal 2023.

The profits will shrink as the BOJ begins to pay interest on excess reserves to push up short-term rates.

The BOJ will still earn yields from its huge bond holdings, though the longer it takes to roll over low-yielding bonds with higher-yielding ones, the bigger its losses will become.

Under a quantitative tightening (QT) plan announced in July, the BOJ plans to halve its monthly Japanese government bond (JGB) purchases to 3 trillion yen as of January-March 2026. It will conduct a mid-term review of its QT plan in June next year to come up with a taper plan thereafter.

($1 = 157.7000 yen)

(Reporting by Leika Kihara)

Post Related

Hims offers cheapest GLP-1 weight-loss pill in US in a shock to Novo, Lilly

Hims offers cheapest GLP-1 weight-loss pill in US in a shock to Novo, Lilly

Online telehealth company Hims and Hers Health on Thursday began offering a much cheaper $49 compounded version of Novo Nordisk's...

Italy’s Enel reports 2025 core profit in line with guidance

Italy’s Enel reports 2025 core profit in line with guidance

Italian utility Enel reported on Thursday an ordinary core profit of 22.9 billion euros ($27 billion), in line with the...

Anthropic releases AI upgrade as market punishes software stocks

Anthropic releases AI upgrade as market punishes software stocks

Technology startup Anthropic on Thursday launched what it called an improved artificial intelligence model, days after its product advances helped...

Investors chase cheaper, smaller companies as risk aversion hits tech sector

Investors chase cheaper, smaller companies as risk aversion hits tech sector

Investors are turning to cheaper, smaller companies while reassessing how much risk they are willing to take owning volatile assets...

AI trade splinters as investors get more selective

AI trade splinters as investors get more selective

The global AI trade is starting to fracture as soaring capex, rising debt loads and doubts over who will profit...

How Glencore and Rio Tinto’s core assets stack up

How Glencore and Rio Tinto’s core assets stack up

Rio Tinto walked away from a mega-mining deal with rival Glencore for the third time on Thursday. Attempts to combine...

Top news

  • UK PM Starmer should quit, Scottish Labour leader says
  • UK PM Starmer tells staff politics should be force for good
  • UK’s Starmer refuses to heed calls to quit over fallout from Epstein scandal
  • Palace ready to help UK police in any inquiry into king’s brother Andrew
  • Hims offers cheapest GLP-1 weight-loss pill in US in a shock to Novo, Lilly
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.