0001paradise★.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:50:01.45ID:6uXWM8it9
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda will face critical market scrutiny during a recess hearing in both the House of Representatives and the House of Councillors on the 23rd. The additional interest rate hike decided by the Bank of Japan at its July monetary policy meeting and the clear hawkish signal sent by Governor Ueda are believed to have led to the turmoil in global financial markets earlier this month. The House of Representatives’ Financial and Monetary Affairs Committee will hear President Ueda’s opinions from 9:30 a.m., and the House of Councillors’ Financial and Monetary Affairs Committee will hear his opinions from 1 p.m. Each tour is scheduled to take two and a half hours. The unusual review, which is being held while the Diet is in recess, was requested by lawmakers seeking an explanation from the Bank of Japan. The Bank of Japan’s hawkish signals helped wipe out as much as $6.4 trillion from global stock markets this month, including the Nikkei average’s biggest ever drop. The stock market has since narrowed its decline, with the S&P 500 index once again approaching its July peak and the Nikkei average recovering about 20% from its August low. The hearing will be held just a few hours before Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at the Jackson Hole forex market conference, so Ueda is likely to refrain from making any newsworthy comments and try to avoid causing as much volatility as possible. Bank of Japan watchers say the governor is likely to avoid making any policy commitments and seek to reassure banks that interest rates will not be raised at a time of financial market volatility. “Governor Ueda’s ultimate goal is probably not to cause any shocks,” said Ueno Tsuyoshi, a senior economist at the Nikkei Research Institute. “The reason why the closed-session review is being held in the first place is because the Bank of Japan’s hawkish message was followed by turmoil in global financial markets, so it would be terrible if they were to do anything that would cause market turmoil at this point,” he said. Hawkish signal from Bank of Japan sends shockwaves through markets | Japanese stocks fluctuate wildly, yen surges
Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Makoto Uchida tried to ease market fears on the 7th by saying that interest rates would not be raised amid volatility in financial markets. He also expressed the view that it is necessary to continue monetary easing at current levels firmly for the “immediate future.” Although the market has calmed down somewhat since this statement, the differences between the governor and deputy governor are causing anxiety in the market. An important point for Bank of Japan watchers to keep a close eye on is whether there will be any change in the nuance of the words used by Governor Ueda. Many Bank of Japan watchers still believe there is a chance of another rate hike this year, citing the view that market turmoil will not last too long. UBS Securities predicts the next rate hike will be in October. Meanwhile, Nomura Securities and Deutsche Securities expect it to be December. Barclays last week brought forward its deadline from April to January next year. A delicate balance: Governor Ueda will likely want to avoid making overly dovish statements due to concerns that the yen may continue to weaken. Heading into the July meeting, calls for an interest rate hike had been growing from politicians and business executives amid the weakening yen. Ueno of Nikko Research Institute pointed out, “If they clearly take a hawkish stance, the yen will appreciate and stocks will plummet.” “If they send out a clearly dovish signal, there is a risk that the yen will weaken significantly, rekindling various concerns arising from the weak yen and returning us to the situation we were in before the July meeting,” he said. Within hours, market attention would shift from Ueda to Fed Chairman Powell, who is speaking at Jackson Hole and whose comments will be scrutinized for clues about future U.S. monetary policy. Shohei Omori, chief desk strategist at Mizuho Securities’ financial markets department, predicted that “the market will see volatile price movements” on the 23rd. While Governor Ueda is likely to echo Deputy Governor Uchida’s comments, he said, “There is a possibility that the market will be misled into giving answers that are misleading or that are perceived as convenient for the market, such as a hawkish stance.” (Excerpt)
Full source.
Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Makoto Uchida tried to ease market fears on the 7th by saying that interest rates would not be raised amid volatility in financial markets. He also expressed the view that it is necessary to continue monetary easing at current levels firmly for the “immediate future.” Although the market has calmed down somewhat since this statement, the differences between the governor and deputy governor are causing anxiety in the market. An important point for Bank of Japan watchers to keep a close eye on is whether there will be any change in the nuance of the words used by Governor Ueda. Many Bank of Japan watchers still believe there is a chance of another rate hike this year, citing the view that market turmoil will not last too long. UBS Securities predicts the next rate hike will be in October. Meanwhile, Nomura Securities and Deutsche Securities expect it to be December. Barclays last week brought forward its deadline from April to January next year. A delicate balance: Governor Ueda will likely want to avoid making overly dovish statements due to concerns that the yen may continue to weaken. Heading into the July meeting, calls for an interest rate hike had been growing from politicians and business executives amid the weakening yen. Ueno of Nikko Research Institute pointed out, “If they clearly take a hawkish stance, the yen will appreciate and stocks will plummet.” “If they send out a clearly dovish signal, there is a risk that the yen will weaken significantly, rekindling various concerns arising from the weak yen and returning us to the situation we were in before the July meeting,” he said. Within hours, market attention would shift from Ueda to Fed Chairman Powell, who is speaking at Jackson Hole and whose comments will be scrutinized for clues about future U.S. monetary policy. Shohei Omori, chief desk strategist at Mizuho Securities’ financial markets department, predicted that “the market will see volatile price movements” on the 23rd. While Governor Ueda is likely to echo Deputy Governor Uchida’s comments, he said, “There is a possibility that the market will be misled into giving answers that are misleading or that are perceived as convenient for the market, such as a hawkish stance.” (Excerpt)
Full source.
市場の視線を一身に浴びる植田日銀総裁、衆参両院で23日に閉会中審査
日本銀行の植田和男総裁は、23日に開かれる衆参両院の閉会中審査で市場の厳しい目にさらされる。日銀が7月の金融政策決定会合で決めた追加利上げと植田総裁が発した明確なタカ派的シグナルが、今月初めの世界的な金融市場の混乱につながったとみられている...
0059Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:42:59.50ID:XE3rjJmC0
>>1
They should openly declare an interest rate hike in the Diet and move toward a stronger yen.
The stronger yen has also boosted Kishida’s approval rating.
The LDP needs to make the yen stronger to win the Lower House election.
They should openly declare an interest rate hike in the Diet and move toward a stronger yen.
The stronger yen has also boosted Kishida’s approval rating.
The LDP needs to make the yen stronger to win the Lower House election.
0098Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 13:05:00.50ID:yI5+xOrP0
>>1
The reason prices are so high in Japan right now is because the US and Europe are giving out too many subsidies during the COVID-19 pandemic,
leading to abnormal inflation that is now spreading to Japan. Inflation cannot be stopped by Japan alone because it is caused by factors outside of Japan. As a major importing country, prices in Japan will be dragged down by import prices and will eventually converge to a single point (similar to prices in Europe and the US), but the only way to get there is to approach it from above or from below. Japan has been in a state of deflation, which has kept price increases more subdued than in Europe and the US, but the overall rate of price increase has not yet reached those of Europe and the US. The reason why the yen is weak now is because America is raising interest rates to stave off inflation in the country,
and the dollar is being bought in response to the higher interest rates. If inflation in the United States subsides, the United States will also begin to lower interest rates, and the weak yen will be resolved. If deflationary Japan were to raise interest rates, it would suffer the double whammy of a recession caused by slowing consumption and rising prices.
The reason prices are so high in Japan right now is because the US and Europe are giving out too many subsidies during the COVID-19 pandemic,
leading to abnormal inflation that is now spreading to Japan. Inflation cannot be stopped by Japan alone because it is caused by factors outside of Japan. As a major importing country, prices in Japan will be dragged down by import prices and will eventually converge to a single point (similar to prices in Europe and the US), but the only way to get there is to approach it from above or from below. Japan has been in a state of deflation, which has kept price increases more subdued than in Europe and the US, but the overall rate of price increase has not yet reached those of Europe and the US. The reason why the yen is weak now is because America is raising interest rates to stave off inflation in the country,
and the dollar is being bought in response to the higher interest rates. If inflation in the United States subsides, the United States will also begin to lower interest rates, and the weak yen will be resolved. If deflationary Japan were to raise interest rates, it would suffer the double whammy of a recession caused by slowing consumption and rising prices.
0002Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:51:43.90ID:wSRmzgQB0
Hurry up and make it 120 yen to the dollar, you idiot.
0004Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:53:08.15ID:drggqOTs0(1/2)
The only thing that can stop the yen from weakening is population growth.
0005Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:54:02.14ID:FjPmaGIT0
Which president (prime minister) would fire him?
0007Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:54:40.00ID:xrKlwRT00
Hurry up and raise interest rates.
0008Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:55:25.13ID:l14DYLp90(1/3)
It would be hilarious if we see another crash bigger than Black Monday. I want the ruling and opposition party politicians to ask crazy questions and draw out Ueda’s abusive comments.
0012Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 11:57:56.69ID:eFq4mls70(2/2)
The term “Ueda shock” is now being used in economic papers not only in Japan but also overseas.
0013Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:01:33.76ID:Uo9ambdi0
Just raise interest rates. Uchida will say something unnecessary again anyway.
0014Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:01:43.48ID:1bt+ZcJN0(1/4)
If we try to make the yen stronger without raising interest rates, then forcing the yen to appreciate by raising interest rates is something even an elementary school student could do. Why not try it out at Kidzania too?
0015Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:02:12.33ID:JDPQOoOR0
I’m afraid something will happen before NVIDIA’s financial results are announced on the 28th.
0016Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:04:04.09ID:7nFl3CtQ0
You should call Uchida too.
0017Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:05:47.91ID:3SUUZfEI0
What if he makes another strange statement, the stock market crashes, and it becomes another Black Monday of the Reiwa era? Lol.
0018Security Guard [lv.6] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:07:22.36ID:emaZBP210
Raise interest rates and see if a global depression really does come.
0020Security Guard [lv.6] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:10:02.85ID:FLie6znn0(1/4)
The other day’s comment was just a light jab to see how things would go. I guess it was meant to be a light greeting. But even though it was meant to be a light jab, the market panicked and people rushed to return the yen. How many people died from that jab?
0023Security Guard [lv.11] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:11:13.05ID:N/DwJJB+0(3/8)
>>20
He got what he deserved by borrowing money and speculating.
He got what he deserved by borrowing money and speculating.
0022Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:11:06.78ID:9khhERwu0
No, it’s because of the American indicators.
0110Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 13:32:21.72ID:fRQlnLxz0(2/11)
>>22
The Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Japan, and their dog, the Nikkei Shimbun, want to do just that, but if you look at the charts,
it’s obvious that stock prices have been crashing since the beginning of this month,
so the only thing we can say is that the Bank of Japan’s interest rate hike was the beginning of Black Monday.
The Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Japan, and their dog, the Nikkei Shimbun, want to do just that, but if you look at the charts,
it’s obvious that stock prices have been crashing since the beginning of this month,
so the only thing we can say is that the Bank of Japan’s interest rate hike was the beginning of Black Monday.
0024Security Guard [lv.6] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:11:43.13ID:FLie6znn0(2/4)
The economy is a living thing that is driven by emotions, and there are many things that cannot be explained by mathematical formulas, though Ueda may not understand this.
0027Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:15:09.29ID:e7ORqj8F0
Don’t talk, it’ll crash again.
0028Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:16:35.39ID:drggqOTs0(2/2)
Maybe you misunderstood that the economy was growing. Foreign money is not growth.
0029Security guard [lv.10].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:16:59.18ID:Aj101TzH0
It would have been fine to leave the stock prices alone and let the yen continue to appreciate, but Uchida has done something unnecessary.
0030Security Guard [lv.6] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:17:00.25ID:FLie6znn0(3/4)
It’s strange that even with a government and central bank that are so economically illiterate, the country was once an economic superpower.
0032Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:18:48.73ID:c9PE9D/s0
Why do it during market hours?
Do it after 3pm!
Do it after 3pm!
0033Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:19:25.09ID:xPp58ArZ0
A man just before the Great Depression.
0034Security Guard [lv.16].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:19:56.11ID:ULN6RvnK0
Maybe I’ll pay more attention this time.
0035Security Guard [lv.6] [Sprout].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:19:56.61ID:FLie6znn0(4/4)
If stock prices fall, the Bank of Japan will also have unrealized losses.
They were trying to encourage investment and push it onto NISA members,
but Ueda’s careless remarks have left NISA members dying in droves, and the idea that investment is dangerous has spread again.
What do these people in this country want to do?
They were trying to encourage investment and push it onto NISA members,
but Ueda’s careless remarks have left NISA members dying in droves, and the idea that investment is dangerous has spread again.
What do these people in this country want to do?
0036Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:19:57.89ID:7EBOlOj80
There’s no way it has that kind of influence lol.
0037Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:25:09.72ID:W+SsTEMe0(1/10)
Strong yen supporters: Low-life scum who can’t get a raise, people on welfare, the elderly, and Koreans living in Japan who earn money in yen and send it back in foreign currency. Weak yen supporters: Ordinary people and young people who benefit from growth.
0038Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:26:07.54ID:iZJyRD5x0(2/5)
>>37
Impression manipulation.
Impression manipulation.
0043Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:28:08.38ID:NGZ9QFNf0(2/4)
>>37
They’re growing because of the weak yen lol
There’s no point unless the weak yen resets things.
They’re growing because of the weak yen lol
There’s no point unless the weak yen resets things.
0039Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:26:51.17ID:NGZ9QFNf0(1/4)
The horror of Haruhiko Kuroda’s unprecedented monetary easing. Just trying to exit the monetary policy a little has generated this kind of reaction. Monetary easing without considering an exit policy is frightening.
0113Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 13:34:11.82ID:fRQlnLxz0(3/11)
>>39
The horror of unprecedented monetary easing?
The horror of unprecedented monetary easing?
Which fool was the BOJ governor who only watched Japan while America and Europe eased their monetary policies and did nothing?
If the Democratic Party government lasted another three years, Japan would collapse, you idiot.
0040Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:27:02.74ID:W+SsTEMe0(2/10)
It would be one thing to raise interest rates when the US is in a rate-raising phase, but it would be foolish to raise interest rates when the US is currently in a rate-cutting phase.
0042Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:27:42.75ID:1bt+ZcJN0(2/4)
99.7% of businesses are small to medium sized, so if interest rates are forced to rise and the yen strengthens, and prices don’t fall, Japanese citizens other than high-ranking officials and civil servants are completely finished. The Bank of Japan Governor’s Kamehameha blast is extremely destructive lol.
0045Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:29:40.01ID:NGZ9QFNf0(3/4)
The only way to end the extraordinary monetary easing is to either live with it until we die, or reset with hyperinflation or default. Even if we exit, it will take decades for it to disappear.
0049Security Guard [lv.18] [Seedling].Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:34:31.02ID:8I6Se84e0(1/2)
>>45
You really did something incredible.
You really did something incredible.
0048Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:31:57.69ID:PxyuvvYs0
The world was probably wondering why the Bank of Japan wasn’t raising interest rates lol
And that put them under surveillance as a currency manipulator
If they were to be blamed, they would be told to raise it even more, saying that 0.25 is too low.
And that put them under surveillance as a currency manipulator
If they were to be blamed, they would be told to raise it even more, saying that 0.25 is too low.
0067Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:50:02.35ID:xTFKXyh40(1/2)
Find out how rising interest rates will affect you.
0077Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:54:31.73ID:W+SsTEMe0(8/10)
>>67
A strong yen leads to lower corporate profits and lower personal assets → lower domestic demand
Debt leads to lower capital investment → lower domestic demand
As a result, there is no growth, and once all available assets are used up, Japan is finished.
A strong yen leads to lower corporate profits and lower personal assets → lower domestic demand
Debt leads to lower capital investment → lower domestic demand
As a result, there is no growth, and once all available assets are used up, Japan is finished.
0087Anonymous Donburako.Aug. 22, 2024 (Thu) 12:57:57.15ID:GShlcB7U0
The Bank of Japan is the guardian of prices, not stock prices.
Other languages: 【日銀植田】市場の視線を一身に浴びる植田日銀総裁、衆参両院であす23日閉会中審査
Comments