Bank of Japan Maintains 0.75% Rate to Start the Year, Awaiting Shunto for Next Steps

2026-02-04

Core Overview:
On January 22, 2026, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) announced it would maintain the benchmark interest rate at 0.75%, in line with market consensus. This decision follows closely on the heels of the rate hike action in December 2025 (raised from 0.5% to 0.75%), indicating that policymakers prefer to adopt a wait-and-see attitude after consecutive actions to assess the lagging impact of monetary tightening on the real economy and exchange rates.

Key Details:
The key to "standing pat" this time lies in confirming inflation stickiness and domestic demand momentum. Although the nominal interest rate has reached 0.75%, considering that core CPI remains above the 2% target, real interest rates remain in the accommodative range. Additionally, the yen exchange rate stabilized slightly after the rate hike, alleviating imported inflation pressure and giving the central bank more time to examine data on corporate capital expenditure and household consumption.

Deep Attribution:
Regarding the future path, major investment banks generally view this as a "hawkish pause." Goldman Sachs points out that the central bank is waiting for the results of the 2026 Shunto wage negotiations to confirm whether the "wage-inflation" spiral is sustainable; Bloomberg Economics also analyzes that if large enterprises can maintain the high level of wage hikes seen last year, it will clear obstacles for the central bank to further normalize policy.

Outlook and Risks:
Looking at the short term (1-2 months), due to a lack of major data catalysts, interest rates are expected to remain at the status quo in February. Medium-term (3-6 months) risks are concentrated on the Shunto results and the extent of the global economic slowdown; if April wage data is strong and external demand does not collapse, the market widely expects the central bank to push interest rates to 1.0% at the end of Q2 or early Q3, gradually moving towards a neutral interest rate level.

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