Why Japan’s Central Bank Remains Dovish, and its Global Implications

 | Jan 19, 2023 03:29AM ET

Japan's central bank continues the great monetary experiment as the most indebted developed nation.

On Wednesday, the Japanese yen (JPY) dropped by 2.7% against its dollar counterpart. Yet, the plunge was erased during the day. Among the world’s central banks, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) continues its ultra-dovish monetary policy. What makes Japan different, and is this sustainable?

h2 Japan: the Odd One Out From the Central Banking Crowd/h2

While the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB) turned ultra-hawkish at 4.5% and 2.5% interest rates, the Bank of Japan is still ultra-dovish. BOJ is the only major central bank with an interest rate in the negative range, at – 0.1%.

Because of this inversion, we have also seen the inverse relationship between the dollar index (DXY) and its weighted currencies. At 57.6% weight for the euro (EUR) and 13.6% weight for the Japanese yen (JPY), both have gone down as the dollar grew stronger during 2022.