Looking at the latest data, the Bank of Japan's current interest rate remains at 0.5%, but the market almost universally expects this week's (December 18-19) policy meeting to directly raise it by 25 basis points to 0.75%. This level may not sound high, but in fact, it is the highest in 30 years since 1995.
The market assigns a probability in the range of 94%-95%, which is essentially a certainty. What supports such strong confidence? Several factors are driving this:
First, inflation hasn't subsided. Japan's core CPI has been stuck above the 2% target line, expected to be in the range of 2.4%-2.7% in 2025, indicating ongoing price pressures. Second, wages are also rising quite rapidly. The results of spring labor negotiations this year were positive, and it is expected that this momentum will continue into spring 2026.
Another hidden driver is the aftermath of the yen's depreciation. The cost of imported goods has increased, leading to imported inflation. Relying solely on other measures isn't enough, so the central bank must use the big tool of rate hikes to cool the economy.
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DAOTruant
· 20h ago
The height that hasn't been seen in 30 years, the Bank of Japan is really getting anxious. Remember how bad the yen depreciation has become.
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ContractBugHunter
· 22h ago
Japan is helpless here. The interest rate levels that haven't been seen in 30 years are dropping directly, potentially reshaping the entire market landscape.
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SchrodingerPrivateKey
· 22h ago
The Bank of Japan's move to actually raise rates to 0.75% is the first time in 30 years. With inflation and yen depreciation hitting from both sides, even the central bank has no choice but to keep raising interest rates aggressively. There's a 94% probability that it's already a death sentence, and we'll see how the story unfolds this week.
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MEVHunter
· 22h ago
nah this is actually wild—jpy finally catching up after 30 years stuck in the basement. 94% probability basically means the mempool's already settled on this one, no frontrunning the boj decision lmk. that import inflation squeeze is brutal tho, they're forced to swing the rate hammer whether they like it or not fr
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WhaleMinion
· 22h ago
30-year highest interest rate? The Bank of Japan is finally going to take serious action, this wave of inflation really can't be sustained
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HalfBuddhaMoney
· 23h ago
A height not seen in 30 years... The Bank of Japan is really panicking this time. Inflation, wages, and yen depreciation are all pushing up together, and raising interest rates has become the only way out.
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SilentAlpha
· 23h ago
The Bank of Japan is really going to take serious action. The interest rate level not seen in 30 years, this time it's serious. The imported inflation issue indeed can't be stopped, and raising interest rates is probably the only way out.
Looking at the latest data, the Bank of Japan's current interest rate remains at 0.5%, but the market almost universally expects this week's (December 18-19) policy meeting to directly raise it by 25 basis points to 0.75%. This level may not sound high, but in fact, it is the highest in 30 years since 1995.
The market assigns a probability in the range of 94%-95%, which is essentially a certainty. What supports such strong confidence? Several factors are driving this:
First, inflation hasn't subsided. Japan's core CPI has been stuck above the 2% target line, expected to be in the range of 2.4%-2.7% in 2025, indicating ongoing price pressures. Second, wages are also rising quite rapidly. The results of spring labor negotiations this year were positive, and it is expected that this momentum will continue into spring 2026.
Another hidden driver is the aftermath of the yen's depreciation. The cost of imported goods has increased, leading to imported inflation. Relying solely on other measures isn't enough, so the central bank must use the big tool of rate hikes to cool the economy.