Japan’s 10-Year Bond Yield Hits Highest

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(MENAFN) Japan’s benchmark 10-year government bond yield surged to its loftiest level since 1999 on Friday as investors amplified wagers that the Bank of Japan might restart increasing interest rates due to ongoing inflationary pressures fueled by elevated energy costs.

The yield ascended to approximately 2.38%, extending a retreat in sovereign debt as the Middle East conflict kept oil prices high and heightened apprehensions about imported inflation in Japan, a nation heavily reliant on foreign energy sources.

This development comes after the BOJ’s choice last week to hold its short-term policy rate steady at 0.75%, while sustaining a tightening inclination, indicating that conditions for further rate hikes remain viable. Governor Kazuo Ueda has remarked that the central bank could “continue raising rates if underlying inflation stays on track toward its 2% target.”

Expectations for an additional rate hike have intensified ahead of the BOJ’s upcoming policy meeting on April 27-28. Analysts and former BOJ officials suggest the central bank may need to act promptly if surging oil costs and a weakening yen transmit more broadly into consumer prices.

The yen continues to face downward pressure as higher crude prices elevate Japan’s import expenditures, while ambiguous signals from Washington and Tehran regarding diplomatic attempts to ease the conflict have kept global markets unsettled. Brent crude traded above $107 per barrel on Friday following a sharp increase in the previous session.

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