The Korea Herald

Japan’s 10-year yield hits more than decade high of 1%

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TOKYO (Reuters) — Japan’s 10year government bond yield rose to an 11-year high of 1 percent Wednesday amid mounting bets for further Bank of Japan policy tightening this year, while a weak auction of 40-year debt added to the pressure for higher yields.

The 10-year JGB yield was last 2 basis points higher at 1 percent, hovering at the psychologi­cally significan­t level for the first time since May 2013, in the very early days of former BOJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda’s unpreceden­ted policyeasi­ng experiment.

The benchmark yield has climbed as much as 27.5 bps since the end of March, the month that current governor Kazuo Ueda lifted interest rates for the first time since 2007.

“If rate expectatio­ns are going to increase, Japanese government bond yields across the curve, particular­ly for the 10-year, are going to rise more,” said Shoki Omori, chief Japan desk strategist at Mizuho Securities.

“The 10-year yield may go as high as 1.2 percent in coming weeks.”

Superlong JGB yields also surged after a poorly received sale of 40year bonds, with the bid-to-cover ratio — a closely watched indicator of demand — dropping to 2.21 from 2.49 at the prior offering in March.

The 40-year yield jumped 3.5 bps to 2.52 percent, the highest since the bonds were reissued in late 2015.

The 30-year yield surged 7.5 bps to a 13-year peak of 2.16 percent, and the 20-year yield climbed 4 bps to 1.83 percent, a level last seen in March 2012.

Ueda suddenly adopted a more hawkish tone two weeks ago, as the weakest yen in 34 years risked derailing a virtuous cycle of mild inflation supporting higher wages.

The gaping US-Japan yield differenti­al has kept the yen depressed despite expectatio­ns for Federal Reserve rate cuts this year, in contrast to the BOJ’s fledgling tightening cycle.

Following a meeting with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on May 7, Ueda said the BOJ will be “vigilant” to yen moves in setting policy. A day later, he said the BOJ may raise rates if the currency’s drop affects prices significan­tly.

The central bank then surprised markets a week ago by cutting the amount of JGBs it offered to purchase in a regular buying operation, sparking bets that quantitati­ve tightening may not be far off.

Analysts at ANZ said in a client note they expect the BOJ to raise its policy rate by 15 bps at its next meeting in mid-June, then follow with a 25 bps hike in October.

At the short-end of the JGB curve, which is more sensitive to monetary policy expectatio­ns, the two-year yield rose 1 bps to 0.35 percent to a fresh 15-year peak.

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