Japan’s Inflation Remains Elevated, Renewing BOJ Rate Hike Speculation and Yen Volatility
Japan’s headline inflation continues to outpace U.S. levels, maintaining a nearly 100 basis point lead.
After a brief respite, renewed inflation concerns have resurfaced with the latest economic data.
According to figures released on Friday, Japan’s core inflation—which excludes fresh food prices—rose 3% year-over-year in February. Although this marks a slight decline from January’s 3.2%, it still exceeded market expectations of 2.9%. Meanwhile, the headline consumer price index (CPI) eased to 3.7% from 4%. Despite the decline, both figures remain significantly above the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) 2% target, reinforcing Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s assertion that Japan has moved beyond its long-standing deflationary era.
Persistent inflation, coupled with rising wages from annual shunto labor negotiations, has fueled speculation about a potential BOJ interest rate hike. Such a move could trigger a yen rally, a development that has historically weighed on risk assets, including cryptocurrencies.
As of writing, the dollar-yen (USD/JPY) pair stood at 149.22, reflecting a near 300-pip rebound since March 11, indicating renewed yen weakness, according to TradingView data.
However, rising Japanese bond yields suggest potential yen strength ahead. The narrowing U.S.-Japan 10-year bond yield spread has provided support for the yen, with Japan’s 10-year bond yield surpassing 1.5% and the 30-year yield exceeding 2.5%, both at multi-decade highs.
A strengthening yen could introduce fresh risk aversion, reminiscent of market conditions observed in August last year.






















