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The Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) decision to raise its policy rate to 1% marks a significant milestone in the country’s long-awaited shift away from ultra-loose monetary policy, following a prolonged deflationary period lasting almost three decades. The move, approved by a 7–1 vote, takes the policy rate to its highest level since 1995.1
Yet, despite its historic significance, the rate hike itself came as little surprise to markets. The hike had been widely anticipated via prior media reports and market expectations. The post announcement press conference was broadly uneventful. While there may be scope to extract more granular implications, it did not materially alter the broader view. Market consensus is pricing in further hikes with another expected by December.2
While it is important to interpret future monetary policy based on the Bank of Japan’s outlook and guidance, the perspective of an experienced Japan specialist portfolio manager based in Tokyo may, in practice, offer more meaningful and practical insights.
Inflation is being embedded in Japan’s real economy
It has been four years since the onset of full-fledged inflation in Japan, with price increases now a part of everyday life. Headline inflation is being artificially suppressed by various government subsidies (utilities, gasoline price cap, education fees), but Producer Price Indices (PPI) are already spiking, and with higher costs stemming from the Middle East conflict, it is possible that inflation could exceed 3% (above the 2% inflation target) in the second half of the year.
Both corporates and households are now adapting to a new inflationary environment, evidenced by rising capital expenditure and household spending that continues to grow steadily. This behavioural shift suggests that inflation is no longer transitory but increasingly structural.
While the BoJ continues to demonstrate cautious communication around monetary policy and inflation, I believe that the real concern is the risk of inflation overshooting. Although it is difficult to predict the market’s immediate reaction following the policy meeting, over the medium to long term, with inflation likely to remain above the BOJ’s target, upward pressure on interest rates is likely to continue.
In currency markets, the yen continues to challenge the $/Y 60 level, with a near-record level of short positions against the yen, although this is at odds against a tightening rates environment, which in our view aren’t yet priced in.
Implications for Japanese companies
From a more constructive equity market perspective, Japanese banks and insurance companies stand to benefit from higher interest rates, which will improve net interest margins and investment returns. At the same time, corporate management teams are increasingly adopting flexible pricing strategies aimed at maximising profitability in an inflationary regime. As a result, corporate earnings across many sectors are looking more likely to remain resilient, supported by both pricing power and sustained economic activity.
1 The Japan Times; Bank of Japan takes rates to 1%, the highest level since 1995; 16 June 2026.
2 Barclays Economics research; Japan Economic Focus; 16 June 2026.
Capital expenditure (capex): Money invested to acquire or upgrade fixed assets such as buildings, machinery, equipment, software, IT systems, vehicles etc in order to maintain or improve operations and foster future growth.
Headline inflation: The total inflation rate for an economy, including all goods and services, often influenced by volatile items such as energy or food prices.
Monetary policy: The policies of a central bank aimed at influencing the level of inflation and growth in an economy. Monetary policy tools include setting interest rates and controlling the supply of money.
Monetary policy normalisation: The phasing-out of central banks’ unconventional monetary policies (zero- or low-interest rates and purchases of short-term government bonds) that were put in place to stimulate a weak economy.
Net interest margin: A key financial metric indicating the profitability of a bank or financial firm’s investment returns relative to its interest expenses, helping investors gauge the entity’s financial health.
Producer Price Index (PPI): A measure of the average change in prices that producers receive for their goods and services, often an early indicator of consumer inflation.
Rate tightening: Tight or contractionary monetary policy is used by central banks to slow overheated economic growth, cut spending when the economy accelerates too fast, or curb rising inflation.
Short position: An investment strategy where an investor sells an asset they do not own, expecting its price to fall so it can be repurchased at a lower price.
Yield: The level of income on a security over a set period, typically expressed as a percentage rate. For equities, a common measure is the dividend yield, which divides recent dividend payments for each share by the share price.
These are the views of the author at the time of publication and may differ from the views of other individuals/teams at Janus Henderson Investors. References made to individual securities do not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security, investment strategy or market sector, and should not be assumed to be profitable. Janus Henderson Investors, its affiliated advisor, or its employees, may have a position in the securities mentioned.
Past performance does not predict future returns. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the amount originally invested.
The information in this article does not qualify as an investment recommendation.
There is no guarantee that past trends will continue, or forecasts will be realised.
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