TOKYO : Japan’s core consumer inflation hit 3.2 per cent in January for its fastest pace in 19 months, data showed on Friday, reinforcing expectations that the central bank will keep raising interest rates from levels still seen as low.
Bond yields rose on the data, as markets factor in the chance that the Bank of Japan (BOJ) could hike interest rates more aggressively than initially thought as inflationary pressure mounts.
The year-on-year increase in the core consumer price index (CPI), which excludes fresh food prices, slightly exceeded a median market forecast for a gain of 3.1 per cent and followed December’s rise of 3.0 per cent.
“While services inflation isn’t accelerating that much, goods inflation isn’t slowing either,” said Ryosuke Katagi, market economist at Mizuho Securities.
“The BOJ will likely see scope to raise interest rates on the view price conditions are moving in line with its forecast.”
A separate index stripping out costs of both fresh food and fuel, which is closely watched by the BOJ as a better gauge of demand-driven inflation, rose 2.5 per cent in January from a year earlier, the data showed.
It was the fastest year-on-year pace since March 2024, when the index rose 2.9 per cent.
The two-year Japanese government bond (JGB) yield rose 1.0 basis point (bps) from Wednesday to stand at 0.830 per cent after the data, for its highest level since October 2008.
For nearly three years, inflation has exceeded the central bank’s target of 2 per cent, underlining rising inflationary pressure that has prompted hawkish remarks from BOJ policymakers such as Wednesday’s comments by board member Hajime Takata.
The BOJ raised its short-term interest rate to 0.5 per cent from 0.25 per cent in January, reflecting its conviction that Japan was making progress in sustainably achieving its inflation target of 2 per cent.
Governor Kazuo Ueda has signalled his readiness to keep raising rates if wages continue to increase and underpin consumption, thereby allowing firms to keep hiking pay.
The BOJ has said solid wage growth will prod service-sector firms to pass on rising labour costs, and replace rising raw material prices as the key driver of inflation in Japan.
But stubbornly high prices of fuel and food throw into doubt the chance that cost-push pressure will dissipate. In January, households still battled soaring prices of rice, vegetables and other food, as well as a 10.8 per cent hike in energy costs.
Headline consumer inflation, including fresh food prices, hit 4.0 per cent in January, accelerating from 3.6 per cent the previous month, and standing at their highest in two years.
By contrast, services inflation rose 1.4 per cent in January from the previous year, slowing from a gain of 1.6 per cent in December, the CPI data showed.
Japan’s economy expanded an annualised 2.8 per cent in the final quarter of last year on robust business expenditure and consumption, shoring up the BOJ’s case for more rate hikes.
A majority of economists polled by Reuters expect the BOJ to hike rates once more this year, most probably during the third quarter, to 0.75 per cent.