Bank Of Japan Policy Outlook
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the BoJ could raise interest rates if economic growth and inflation allow. Markets still expect no change at the March meeting due to uncertainty, volatile energy prices, and geopolitical risks. Eurozone data was mixed. Retail Sales fell 0.1% month-on-month in January versus expectations for a 0.3% rise. Retail Sales rose 2% year-on-year, above the 1.7% forecast. This pointed to firmer annual spending despite the monthly drop. European Central Bank officials urged caution and monitored energy markets linked to the conflict. Some policymakers said there was no current need to raise rates, while higher Oil and Gas prices increased inflation concerns.Volatility Breakout Positioning
The current pressure on EUR/JPY is a direct result of a flight to safety, with geopolitical tensions driving capital into the Japanese Yen. We’ve seen crude oil prices spike over 15% in the last month to nearly $105 a barrel, pushing the currency volatility index to its highest point this year. This risk-averse environment suggests that bets against the yen are currently facing strong headwinds. Despite the Bank of Japan Governor’s talk of rate hikes, we should be cautious. We only have to look back to their first tentative step away from negative rates in March 2024 to see how slowly they are willing to move. With Japan’s latest core inflation for February 2026 coming in at a modest 2.1%, the BoJ has little incentive for a sudden, aggressive move. The Eurozone faces a similar dilemma, with ECB officials sounding dovish due to the conflict. However, the flash estimate for February 2026 CPI showed a worrying jump to 2.8% year-over-year, snapping a six-month downtrend and reviving inflation fears. This echoes the energy price shocks we navigated throughout 2025, which kept policy tight for longer than expected. Given this tug-of-war between risk aversion and inflation, positioning for a breakout in volatility, rather than a specific direction, appears prudent. We are seeing a surge in demand for options, with one-month EUR/JPY implied volatility climbing from 8% to over 13% in just two weeks. Purchasing straddles or strangles could offer a way to profit from a significant move, regardless of whether the pair breaks higher on ECB hawkishness or lower on continued safe-haven demand. Looking back, the market conditions of 2025 taught us that central banks are slow to react to initial geopolitical shocks, preferring to wait for clear data. During the supply chain scares in Asia that year, the yen initially strengthened for several weeks before the fundamental economic data reasserted control. This suggests that while short-term yen strength is the immediate play, underlying inflation pressures in Europe could cause a sharp reversal in the weeks ahead. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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