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Just caught something interesting in the BOJ playbook. Ueda's latest speech essentially put the brakes on April rate hike bets, and the market reacted instantly. Overnight swap traders slashed their April 28 hike probability from 45% down to 33% - a massive pullback from the 60% odds floating around last Friday. The USD/JPY immediately popped 0.24% to 159.68 yen on the shift.
Here's what changed: Ueda's tone got noticeably more cautious this time around. Instead of his usual "rates are coming if data cooperates" messaging, he started emphasizing geopolitical risks - specifically the Middle East escalation. The speech itself was delivered by Deputy Governor Himino while Ueda was in Washington, but the market read between the lines pretty clearly.
What caught traders' attention was how Ueda framed the external risks. He pointed out that Middle East tensions are already spiking global oil prices and creating financial market volatility. For an import-dependent economy like Japan, that's a real headwind - higher energy costs eat into growth and inflation expectations get messier. Supply chain disruptions could also slow production. Basically, he was signaling that external shocks now matter more to policy timing than the original March guidance.
The interesting part? This was one of Ueda's few scheduled appearances before April 28, and there are no other major BOJ speaker slots lined up this month. So traders treated every word as a policy signal. The shift from "we're hiking if things go as planned" to "we're watching geopolitical risks closely" hit differently.
Market's clearly recalibrating now. The probability collapse in just a few hours shows how sensitive positioning is to central bank language. If Middle East tensions stay elevated, that April hike could be off the table entirely.