Japan households expect inflation surge, complicating BOJ rate cut plans

2 hours ago 2



The Bank of Japan’s latest quarterly survey shows 83% of Japanese households expect higher prices over the next five years, with an average forecasted inflation rate of 10-11% for the coming year. This gap with the central bank’s core CPI projections of around 2% weighs against any rate cut, with the market for a rate decrease after the April 2026 meeting at 0.1% YES.

Market reaction

The April 2026 rate decrease market remains nearly flat. Actual inflation has moderated, with core CPI at 1.6% in February, but household expectations run far higher. The discrepancy is partly driven by the Iran war, which has affected energy prices and the yen’s value. The market is thinly traded: USDC volume at just $8 over the past 24 hours, and it takes only $114 to move the odds by 5 points. A single large trade could easily shift prices given this low liquidity.

Why it matters

The persistence of high household inflation expectations makes a rate cut unlikely unless economic conditions change dramatically. The 83% figure and the 10-11% average expected inflation rate dwarf the BOJ’s own 2% core CPI projection. This disconnect keeps the BOJ under pressure to hold its current policy stance rather than ease, even as actual inflation readings have come down.

What to watch

Buying YES at 0.1¢ would pay $1 if the BOJ cuts rates, but the bet requires believing the BOJ will reverse course despite current inflation concerns. Traders should monitor statements from Governor Kazuo Ueda, wage negotiation outcomes, oil price movements, and any shifts in geopolitical tensions that could change the BOJ’s policy calculus.

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