"BoJ ramps up purchase of government bonds
By Mure Dickie in Tokyo
Published: March 18 2009 12:52 | Last updated: March 18 2009 12:52
The Bank of Japan is to increase its purchases of Japanese government bonds by nearly a third, the latest in a series of increasingly assertive measures by the central bank to respond to the pressures created by the global financial crisis and a fierce domestic recession.
The BoJ said its decision to raise buying of JGBs from Y1,400bn a month to Y1,800bn was intended to ensure there was enough liquidity in the financial system to ensure its stability.
However, the move will also help to hold down bond yields and smooth financing for Japan’s government just as it prepares to start drawing up a new package of fiscal measures to stimulate the world’s second largest economy.
The BoJ has been widely criticised by Japanese politicians and officials for what they see as its overly-conservative response to the current downturn, the country’s sharpest in decades.
Masaaki Shirakawa, BoJ governor, is deeply reluctant to return to the policy of “quantitative easing” that the bank used to try to boost growth from 2001 to 2006 and the bank’s policy board unanimously voted to maintain its current 0.1 policy interest rate.
However, the BoJ has become gradually more bold in its efforts to boost financial system liquidity and support financial institutions, this week unveiling a draft plan that would see it provide up to Y1,000bn in subordinated loans to large commercial banks.
The loan scheme is intended as a safeguard to be used if conditions worsen for local lenders that have so far been much less affected by the global financial turmoil that US or European counterparts but have seen their capital bases hit by falls in the value of their equity holdings.
By supporting banks, the BoJ hopes to encourage lending to the country’s corporate sector.
The bank, which is already buying corporate debt itself to help ensure companies can access credit, said on Wednesday that fundraising for the crucial financial year-end period through this month had “mostly been completed”.
However, the bank added markets could remain under stress, with economic conditions “likely to continue deteriorating for the time being”.
By increasing its JGB purchases and buying corporate debt, the BoJ is mirroring in a more cautious way the balance sheet expansions being undertaken by counterparts in the US and UK.
However, the BoJ has avoided describing its actions as marking a return to quantitative easing, which it defines as providing excess liquidity to the financial system by targeting the level of reserves held by banks along with a commitment to long-term low or zero interest rates.
Some analysts say the distinction is increasingly irrelevant. “The Bank’s actions are boosting the monetary base and ramping up its balance sheet, which is QE in all but name( NB DON ),” wrote Julian Jessop chief international economist at Capital Economics in a research note.
The increased purchase of government bonds will be welcomed within the administration of Taro Aso, Japan’s prime minister, who is currently preparing the ground for a new package of stimulus measures likely to be sent to the Diet early in the fiscal year that begins in April."


































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