
Key Points
- The BOJ raised its policy rate from 0.75% to 1.0%, the highest level in three decades. The decision was passed by a 7-1 vote, with one member citing concerns that Middle East tensions could weigh on growth and employment.
- Despite headline CPI easing to around 1.5%, the BOJ expects inflation to rise back above 2% as higher energy prices and wage pass-through feed into consumer prices.
- The Bank reiterated that financial conditions remain accommodative and real interest rates remain negative, suggesting policy is still supportive rather than restrictive.
- We expect the pace of future tightening to remain gradual and data-dependent. The possibility of an additional rate hike later this year will depend on how inflation and growth evolve.
The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate from 0.75% to 1.0% at its 15-16 June meeting as widely expected by market, bringing borrowing costs to Japan’s highest level since 1995. The decision was passed by a 7-1 vote, signalling broad support for continued policy normalisation while acknowledging lingering downside risks.
The dissent came from Asada Toichiro, who argued that downside risks to production and employment from the Middle East situation were greater than upside risks to prices. This highlights that the BOJ is still navigating a difficult balance between persistent inflation pressures and risks to economic activity.
Even after the hike, the BOJ emphasised that financial conditions remain accommodative and real interest rates remain negative, particularly in the short- to medium-term. This suggests the move to 1.00% is a gradual reduction in accommodation, not an aggressive restriction on growth. Overall, financial markets reacted calmly to the decision. The Nikkei 225 rallied by less than 1% before consolidating, USD/JPY remained around the 160 level with only modest volatility, and Japanese government bonds yield rallied as investors focused on the BoJ’s gradual approach to future tightening. The muted reaction across asset classes suggests that the June rate hike had been largely priced in, with market attention now shifting to the timing and magnitude of subsequent policy moves.
Figure 1: Policy rate at 1.0% suggesting further room for normalisation towards estimated neutral rate.

BOJ Outlook
The BOJ maintained that Japan’s economy continues to recover moderately, although some weakness has emerged from Middle East-related disruptions. Exports and industrial production remain broadly flat, while housing investment continues to decline. However, domestic fundamentals remain supported by high corporate profits, resilient private consumption, tight labour market conditions and accommodative financial conditions.
Corporate profits remain elevated, helped by strong global AI-related demand, while business fixed investment continues to rise moderately. Private consumption has also remained resilient on the back of improving employment and income conditions, although household sentiment has weakened.
On growth, the BOJ acknowledged that higher crude oil prices are likely to weigh on corporate profits and household real income through weaker terms of trade. As a result, Japan’s growth is expected to decelerate. However, the Bank does not expect a sharp slowdown, with government measures, accommodative financial conditions and still-high corporate profitability expected to keep the economy growing moderately.
On inflation, the BOJ noted that CPI excluding fresh food has eased to around 1.5%, mainly due to government energy relief measures. However, inflation is expected to accelerate clearly above 2% as higher crude oil prices feed into energy and goods prices, while firms continue passing wage increases through to selling prices.
More importantly, the BOJ expects the wage-price mechanism to remain intact. Labour markets remain tight, medium- to long-term inflation expectations continue to rise, and underlying CPI inflation is expected to gradually move towards the 2% price stability target between the second half of FY2026 and FY2027.
Overall, the June meeting signals confidence in further policy normalisation, but not aggressive tightening. The BOJ will continue to monitor Middle East developments, global AI-related demand and foreign exchange movements when deciding the timing and pace of future rate hikes.
Japan’s reflation process is becoming more durable.
Compared with the previous rate hike in December, several domestic developments have strengthened the case for policy normalisation. Firstly, Japan's annual Shunto wage negotiations have delivered another year of robust pay increases at 5.09%, the third consecutive year above 5%. Labour shortages remain persistent across many industries, encouraging firms to pass higher labour costs through to prices while supporting household purchasing power.
Although headline inflation has softened due to subsidies and base effects, underlying price pressures remain firm, supported by wage pass-through, producer prices and elevated energy costs.
Figure 2: Headline inflation has softened, but underlying inflation remains sticky

Despite the gradual normalisation of monetary policy, Japan's economy remained resilient. Real GDP growth accelerated from 0.7% annualised in Q4 2025 to 1.8% in Q1 2026, supported by stronger private consumption and a meaningful rebound in net exports.
Table 1: Stronger consumption and net exports lift Japan’s 1Q26 growth
|
GDP Growth Contribution (Annualised QoQ) |
Q4 2025 |
Q1 2026 |
|
Private consumption |
0.2ppt |
0.7ppt |
|
Residential investment |
0.8ppt |
0.2ppt |
|
Business investment |
0.9ppt |
-0.5ppt |
|
Public demand |
0.3ppt |
0.5ppt |
|
Net exports |
0.2ppt |
1.2ppt |
|
Inventories |
-1.5ppt |
-0.3ppt |
|
Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., iFAST compilations. Data as of 16 June 2026. |
||
The composition of growth is particularly encouraging. Consumption strengthened alongside improving labour market conditions and wage growth, while inventory drag eased substantially. Although business investment softened, domestic demand remains sufficiently resilient to support gradual monetary policy normalisation.
Government policy continues to support domestic demand.
Monetary tightening is being complemented by expansionary fiscal policy aimed at cushioning households from elevated living costs. Most recently, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s ruling coalition reaffirmed that discussions continue to centre on reducing the food consumption tax from 8% to 0% for two years, rather than implementing a smaller 1% cut. The proposal, estimated to cost approximately JPY 5 trillion annually, is intended to provide direct relief to households and sustain consumer spending.
The government has also introduced additional measures to cushion elevated energy costs through fuel and utility support programmes. Together with rising wages, these initiatives should help preserve household purchasing power and offset part of the drag from gradually higher interest rates.
Oil prices may moderate but are likely to stay elevated.
The recent US-Iran agreement has reduced the immediate risk of further geopolitical escalation and may help stabilise energy markets. However, we do not expect crude oil prices to return quickly to pre-conflict levels. Oil prices will stay structurally elevated in the near term as supply-chain adjustments, shipping disruptions and lingering geopolitical risks continue to constrain normalisation.
Read more: The Iran deal is done, but oil isn't going back to USD 65. Here’s why.
For Japan, which remains heavily dependent on imported energy, this means imported inflation risks are likely to persist even if the worst-case scenario is avoided. Over the longer term, the government’s efforts to restart nuclear reactors should gradually reduce reliance on imported fossil fuels and strengthen Japan’s energy security. Combined with targeted fiscal support, these measures should help cushion the economy against external energy shocks while allowing the BOJ to continue policy normalisation without materially derailing growth.
We expect the pace of future policy normalisation to remain gradual and firmly data dependent.
Historically, the BOJ has proceeded cautiously between policy adjustments, preferring to assess the impact of previous rate hikes before implementing additional tightening. As such, another move at the following meeting is unlikely in our view. Future decisions will likely hinge on wage growth, underlying inflation, household demand and energy prices, with policymakers remaining firmly data dependent.
BOJ is likely to continue balancing upside inflation risks against downside risks to growth. Should inflation remain persistent, wage gains continue to feed through to prices, or the yen weaken materially, another rate hike later this year remains possible. Conversely, if growth slows more sharply or external risks intensify, the BOJ may opt to pause and assess the impact of previous tightening.
Table 2: Scenario analysis
|
Scenario |
Growth |
Inflation |
BoJ Response |
|
Gradual normalisation |
Moderate slowdown, but no recession |
Near 2% target |
Continue gradual, data-dependent normalisation |
|
Second hike later in 2026 |
- |
Persistently above 2% target |
One additional hike becomes more likely |
|
Faster tightening |
- |
Inflation materially overshoots target |
BoJ may accelerate tightening |
|
Pause |
Sharp deterioration |
- |
Pause further tightening to assess growth risks |
Japanese Yen: Range-Bound Near Term, Gradual Appreciation Medium Term
A higher policy rate should provide incremental support for the Japanese yen by narrowing interest rate differentials and reinforcing expectations of BOJ policy normalisation. However, we do not expect an immediate or sharp appreciation, as much of the anticipated tightening has already been priced in, while US-Japan rate differentials remain wide.
In the near term, we expect USD/JPY to remain broadly range-bound around 155-160. On one hand, gradual BoJ normalisation and the prospect of further rate hikes provide support for the yen. On the other hand, expansionary fiscal measures, including energy subsidies and proposed tax cuts could widen fiscal deficits and increase government borrowing needs, limiting the pace of appreciation. Further yen weakness also appears to increasingly limited as the 160 level remains policy sensitive. If currency moves become disorderly, the risk of verbal intervention or direct action from Japanese authorities could rise.
With USD/JPY near 160 and yen futures positioning back near multi-year short extremes, further yen weakness appears increasingly crowded. Such crowded positioning increases the potential for short-covering rallies if BOJ normalisation continues or US yields decline.
Figure 3: Crowded short Yen positioning may limit further depreciation

Over the medium term, we maintain a slightly positive view on the yen, with USD/JPY potentially moving towards the 150-155 range as BOJ normalisation continues, US-Japan rate differentials narrow and improving wage growth strengthens Japan’s domestic fundamentals. That said, appreciation is likely to be gradual, as fiscal expansion and Japan’s reliance on imported energy remain constraints.
Japanese Equities: Gradual policy normalisation favours financials and domestic-oriented sectors.
Japanese financials remain one of the clearest beneficiaries of policy normalisation. After operating in a near-zero interest rate environment for decades, even modest increases in policy rates can meaningfully improve banks' net interest margins and profitability.
Bloomberg estimates that every 25 bps increase in the BOJ policy rate could add approximately JPY110 billion in annual revenue for Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG) and JPY120 billion for Mizuho Financial Group through improved lending spreads and stronger net interest income. The three megabanks are also projected to generate more than JPY8 trillion in combined net interest income by FY2027, supported by rising domestic loan yields and resilient credit demand.
Figure 4: Policy normalisation supports rising net interest income for Japan’s megabanks (Estimation based on another 25bps rate hike before March 2027)

Unlike previous tightening cycles in other economies, Japan's rate hikes are occurring alongside improving wage growth and healthy corporate balance sheets, reducing the risk of a sharp deterioration in asset quality.
We also remain constructive on domestic consumer-related sectors, supported by resilient wage growth, tight labour markets and fiscal measures aimed at supporting household purchasing power. However, we are more cautious on J-REITs and highly rate-sensitive sectors, where rising yields could pressure financing costs and valuations. Exporters may also face some translation headwinds if yen appreciation continues, although the impact should be manageable if currency strength remains gradual.
Key Takeaways
Overall, the BOJ’s move to 1.0% should be interpreted as a sign of economic resilience rather than a headwind to growth.
We expect future tightening to remain gradual and data-dependent, allowing Japan’s reflation cycle to continue without materially disrupting domestic activity. Combined with supportive fiscal measures, ongoing structural reforms and improving corporate fundamentals, we remain constructive on Japanese equities.
Our preferred exposures remain financials and domestically oriented consumer companies. Investors seeking diversified fund exposure to Japan equities can invest through the Eastspring Investments – Japan Dynamic AS SGD and Amova Japan Equity SGD while those looking for ETF exposure can consider the Xtrackers Nikkei 225 UCITS ETF 1D (LSE: XDJP).
