Bank of Japan chief signals vigilance to yen moves, impact on economy

Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda attends a press conference after a BOJ policy meeting in Tokyo, Japan, March 19, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon Purchase Licensing Rights

The Bank of Japan will closely watch yen moves as they affect the economy ​and prices, Governor Kazuo Ueda said on Monday, suggesting that ‌rising import costs from a weak currency could justify raising interest rates in the coming months.
The remark came as the yen slid past 160 against the dollar to ​its weakest point since July 2024, triggering threats of intervention by Japan’s ​top currency diplomat on Monday.

“We don’t guide monetary policy directly ⁠to control foreign exchange rate moves,” Ueda told Parliament. “But currency market ​moves are obviously among factors that hugely affect economic and price developments.”
Yen fluctuation ​has a greater impact on inflation now than it did in the past as companies become more active in raising prices and wages, Ueda said.
“We will guide policy appropriately ​by scrutinising how currency moves could affect the likelihood of achieving ​our growth and price forecasts, as well as risks,” he said, when asked by a ‌lawmaker ⁠whether the BOJ could raise rates to combat yen weakening, which pushes up import costs.

The BOJ held its short-term rate steady at 0.75% in March but maintained its bias for tighter monetary policy, warning that surging oil prices driven by ​the Middle East ​conflict could exacerbate ⁠inflationary pressures.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/boj-watching-fx-movement-factor-affecting-economy-governor-ueda-says-2026-03-30/

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