BOJ Governor Ueda announces 0.75% rate hike at press conference, with dynamic charts of yen fluctuations, inflation, bank adjustments, and market reactions in Tokyo financial district.
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BOJ 0.75% Rate Hike: Ueda's Outlook, Market Reactions, and Bank Responses

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Following its December 19-20 policy meeting, the Bank of Japan raised its rate to 0.75%, prompting yen fluctuations, sustained high inflation, bank rate adjustments, and measured government support amid U.S. tariff concerns and shunto wage prospects.

Building on the BOJ's decision to hike its policy rate to around 0.75%—the first since January and highest in 30 years—Governor Kazuo Ueda emphasized at the post-meeting press conference that "it is highly likely the mechanism by which both wages and prices rise moderately will be maintained."

The move accounts for limited impacts from U.S. tariffs under the Trump administration, with Ueda noting, "Corporate earnings are expected to remain at high levels overall." He also anticipates "steady wage increases" in 2026 shunto negotiations similar to this year.

Post-hike, the yen weakened, with dollar-yen at ¥156.73-75 in Tokyo and ¥157.70 in New York. Japan's CPI rose 3.0% year-on-year in November, exceeding the 2% target for 44 months. Analyst Tsuyoshi Ueno of NLI Research Institute warned, "If the rate hike ends here, weak yen persists, potentially forcing moderate further hikes."

Major banks reacted: MUFG, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking, Mizuho, and Sumitomo Mitsui Trust will lift ordinary deposit rates to 0.3% from 0.2% on February 2, 2026—highest since 1993 for some. MUFG and Mizuho raised short-term prime rates to 2.125% from 1.875%, impacting most floating housing loans.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed respect for BOJ independence, aligning with recent record supplementary budget for growth.

Ce que les gens disent

Discussions on X note the BOJ's expected 25bps rate hike to 0.75%, the highest in 30 years, amid sustained inflation and wage growth. Governor Ueda's dovish outlook emphasized deeply negative real rates, leading to yen weakening and positive market reactions like Nikkei gains. Sentiments range from celebration of Japan's normalization and economic resilience to skepticism on carry trade unwind and global liquidity tightening, though many view the move as priced-in with gradual future hikes anticipated.

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Illustration of Bank of Japan rate hike to 0.75% amid yen depreciation and market unease.
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The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate to 0.75% from 0.5% on December 20, marking a 30-year high aimed at curbing inflation. However, the yen weakened sharply against the dollar and other major currencies. Markets reacted with sales due to the BOJ's vague outlook on future hikes.

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