Illustration of Bank of Japan rate hike to 0.75% amid yen depreciation and market unease.
Illustration of Bank of Japan rate hike to 0.75% amid yen depreciation and market unease.
Image générée par IA

Bank of Japan raises rates as yen weakens

Image générée par IA

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.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) raised its policy rate to 0.75% from 0.5% on December 20, 2025, reaching the highest level since 1995. The move, widely anticipated, aimed to address inflation holding at 3% in November, above the 2% target. However, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda remained vague in his post-meeting press conference about the timing and pace of future hikes, stating only that 'the door is open to further tightening.'

The yen fell sharply in response. The dollar surged to a four-week high of 157.67 yen before settling 1.23% higher at 157.535 yen. The euro reached a record 184.71 yen, the Swiss franc an all-time high of 197.23 yen, and sterling climbed 1.36% to 210.96 yen, its highest since 2008. In its statement, the BOJ maintained that underlying inflation would converge around its 2% target in the latter half of the three-year projection through fiscal 2027, noting real rates remained 'significantly low' post-hike.

Market analysts offered mixed views. Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex, said, 'The BOJ delivered a rate hike like everybody expected... The yen is weaker across the board. I think many people are saying that the BOJ was not hawkish enough.' Elias Hadad of BBH added in a note, 'In our view, the bar for additional BOJ rate hikes is low,' citing persistent wage and inflation pressures.

Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama warned, 'We will respond appropriately to excessive moves, including those driven by speculators.' Traders are eyeing potential official intervention, last seen in July 2024 when the dollar hit 161.96 yen. Japan's economy contracted 0.6% in the third quarter, but the BOJ highlighted moderate recovery amid declining U.S. tariff uncertainties. This hike follows the first increase in 17 years in 2024, signaling an end to decades of deflationary pressures. The weak yen has fueled imported inflation, complicating the outlook.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions reflect skepticism toward the BOJ's rate hike effectively strengthening the yen, attributing continued weakness to wide rate differentials with the Fed, dovish guidance, and fiscal spending. Some users argue the move was anticipated and priced in, muting carry trade unwinds. Critics call policy still too accommodative with negative real rates. Local positives include surging mortgage applications benefiting certain firms. Concerns rise over potential interventions and JGB yield pressures.

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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.

The Bank of Japan decided on December 19 to raise its short-term policy rate target from 0.5% to 0.75%, marking a 30-year high since 1995 and the first increase since January. The move anticipates wage hikes and aims to achieve the 2% inflation target amid elevated inflation and a weak yen.

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A former executive director of the Bank of Japan predicts up to four interest rate hikes by 2027. The central bank is widely expected to raise borrowing costs to 0.75% on December 19, its first move since January, with three more increases potentially following. Governor Kazuo Ueda will likely indicate that the cycle is not over even after this hike, according to Hideo Hayakawa.

A leading indicator of Japan's services sector prices rose 2.6% in January from a year earlier, matching December's gain. The data signals that rising wages from a tight labor market continue to exert inflationary pressure on the economy. Bank of Japan figures released on Wednesday highlight this trend.

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Le PIB du T4 2025 du Japon a été révisé à la hausse à 1,3 % annualisé contre les 0,2 % préliminaires rapportés le 16 février, grâce à de solides dépenses des entreprises. Les dépenses des ménages en janvier pour les biens et services privés sont restées stables malgré une baisse sur un an, les prix de l'essence au détail contenus atténuant l'inflation. Les analystes anticipent désormais que la Banque du Japon maintiendra ses taux en avril et les relèvera en juin.

South Korea's central bank decided to keep its benchmark interest rate at 2.5 percent during a monetary policy meeting in Seoul on January 15. This marks the fifth consecutive hold since July, driven by a weakened won and inflation concerns that limit further easing. BOK Governor Rhee Chang-yong emphasized a data-driven approach, leaving room for potential rate cuts in the next three months amid high uncertainty.

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La Banque de Corée a maintenu son taux d'intérêt de référence stable à 2,5 % pour la quatrième fois consécutive le 27 novembre, au milieu d'un won en baisse et d'une instabilité sur le marché immobilier. La banque centrale a relevé sa prévision de croissance à 1,0 % pour cette année et 1,8 % pour l'année prochaine. Cette décision équilibre la reprise économique dans la consommation et les exportations face aux risques de stabilité financière.

 

 

 

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