Are Central Banks Running Out of Options?

 | Jul 29, 2016 07:15AM ET

In the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) case, it may be so, as Governor Kuroda and his fellow monetary policy members disappointed the market overnight with its modest stimulus package.

Of late, Kuroda has had a high probability of disappointing investors and last nights monetary policy announcement was no different.

The modest dose of stimulus delivered is perhaps a sign that the BoJ may be running up against the limits of monetary policy. Effectively, Kuroda and company have decided to kick the “can” down the road on deciding to implement further large-scale stimulus, allowing PM Abe’s government to do more heavy lifting with his fiscal plan instead.

Earlier this week, Abe announced a plan to spend as much as +¥28T ($354B) in economic stimulus, but leaked documents show that the final amount could be much lower and lacking a new strategy. Only time will tell.

1. BoJ announced more stimulus but underwhelms market expectations

The BoJ kept its key policy rate (IOFER) unchanged at -0.10% and maintained its annual monetary base target at +¥80T. Governor Kuroda has ordered an assessment of the effectiveness of their policy at the next meeting in September and reiterated that the BoJ would add more stimulus if necessary.

Nevertheless, they did ‘ease’ its policy further by expanding annual purchases of ETFs from +¥3.3T to +¥6.0T while doubling its USD lending program to +$24B.

Investors’ disappointment in the BoJ was reflected in the yen’s immediate advance against the U.S. dollar to sub ¥103.00 handle from its NY close north of ¥105.00.

In their quarterly forecasts, the BoJ saw inflation for the current year cut to +0.1% from +0.5%, but the next two-years were maintained at +1.7% and +1.9% respectively.

On growth, the current year was cut to +1.0% from +1.2%, but next year was raised dramatically to +1.3% from +0.1% – presumably in part to expected pause in Japan’s consumption tax increase.

Conclusion, the BoJ views the current monetary measures and the latest announced +€28T fiscal stimulus from PM Abe will have the needed impact to shock the economy. With yen at such lofty heights, FX traders currently do not seem to agree.

2. Stocks indicies mixed results

The BoJ’s moderate stimulus package has produced some mixed results in the final trading day of the week. Stateside, investors today will have to look towards the large number of earnings and data releases for support.

Ahead of the U.S open, Euro bourses are trading higher. Financial stocks seem to be supporting most of those gains after a plethora of banking earnings were announced pre-market. U.S. stock futures currently see red, as investors seem to be erring on the side of caution ahead of the this morning Q2 U.S. economic growth data release (08:30 EDT).

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Disappointment over BoJ’s latest easing action is also weighing on sentiment.

Indices: Stoxx50 +0.3% at 2,983, FTSE flat at 6,722, DAX +0.6% at 10,336, CAC 40 +0.2% at 4,430, IBEX 35 +1.4% at 8,597, FTSE MIB +1.8% at 16,825, SMI +0.5% at 8,138, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%