(3)
(b) Jonathan Soble, Japan Bond Yield Slides Below Zero and Stocks Fall; The negative interest rates introduced by the Bank of Japan alarmed investors. New York Times, Feb 10, 2016.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/1 ... tive-territory.html
Quote:
(i) "On Tuesday [yesterday, Feb 9], the yield on Japanese 10-year bonds, the benchmark of government borrowing, dropped to zero [and then negative] for the first time. * * * meaning some investors were buying bonds despite knowing that if they held them until maturity, they would come away with less money than they paid. And on top of that, a strong yen dragged Japanese stocks down more than 5 percent in the worst trading day this year.
(ii) "The reversal of bond-investor logic flows from the [Jan 29] introduction of negative interest rates [of minus 0.1%] by the central bank, the Bank of Japan, experts say.
(iii) "Like savers depositing money at a local bank, banks keep their own unused cash at the central bank. The interest they earn on those reserves — or do not earn, as the case may be — helps determine the cost of other kinds of borrowing and lending.
"By making it unprofitable for banks to hold cash, Mr [BOJ governor Haruhiko] KURODA 日本銀行(日銀)総裁 黒田東彦 hopes to encourage them to lend more freely [jargon: inject money into economy] and get businesses and households to spend. He also wants to give a lift to consumer prices [bringing about inflation], which have been sagging [deflation]
"In other countries that have introduced negative interest rates, like Sweden and Switzerland, government bond yields have also been pushed below zero.
"Masamichi ADACHI 足立 正道, a former central bank official who is now an analyst at JPMorgan Chase, said that the reversal in bond yields was bound to happen eventually, given the negative interest rate policy, but it occurred more quickly than many expected. The imposition of negative rates on bank reserves will not even take effect until next week.
"a factor that is complicating Mr Kuroda’s stimulus program: a rush by global investors to buy the yen [with dollar due to 'fears about a US recession' stated in the next paragraph], which is seen as a safe currency at a time of economic uncertainty. The resulting rise in the yen’s exchange rate [relative to dollar] has hurt the Japanese stock market [see (e)] and darkened the outlook for inflation, canceling out much of the efforts of the Bank of Japan, or BOJ.
(iv) "One goal of negative interest rates is to redirect investors’ money from bonds into more theoretically productive assets like property and stocks.
(v) "This week the yen has strengthened to a little over 114 to the dollar, about 10 percent stronger than its most recent low. That is bad news for the many Japanese companies that earn revenues outside Japan: the stronger the yen, the less their foreign-currency earnings contribute to profits.
"The Nikkei 225-stock average dropped 5.4 percent Tuesday, its biggest one-day drop since May 2013, as investors reacted to the potential blow to corporate earnings.
(vi) "Easy money from the central bank [quantitative or monetary easing] had kept the yen relatively weak since 2013, but a reversal appears to be gathering pace despite the central bank’s latest move.
"Japan’s status as a haven for investors can seem puzzling. It is carrying the heaviest government debt load in the world, at the equivalent of about two and a half years’ economic output. But most experts are sanguine about the risks. The debt is still amply funded by local savings. And taking the private sector into account, Japan as a whole is a major net creditor, not a borrower. That greatly reduces the risk of instability.
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