The week ahead is going to be big for central banks, with interest rate decisions from the Bank of Japan (BoJ) on Tuesday, the Federal Reserve (the Fed) on Wednesday, and the Bank of England (BoE) on Thursday.
The BoJ has been the only major central bank with interest rates in negative territory for a while now, but there are growing expectations that the Bank will finally raise them this week. Traders are now evenly split about which way the decision might go. But two separate economic reports last week could give the BoJ the final push it needs to deliver its first rate hike since 2007. First, revised economic growth figures showed that Japan avoided a recession at the end of last year. Second, early results from spring wage negotiations at big Japanese companies suggest that workers are on track to secure their biggest pay raises in three decades. That’s key for the BoJ: strong wage growth is seen as key to keeping inflation going, after decades of economy-busting deflation.
In contrast, traders see almost no chance that the Fed will change its interest rates this week, despite hopes for a cut. It’s not hard to understand why: the Fed’s been using higher interest rates to try to bring down the country’s hot inflation, and the past two months have shown that consumer prices are still rising frustratingly fast. And until things cool down a bit more, the Fed has hinted that it may just keep things as they are. After all, the US economy and its job market are still chugging along, and don’t seem to be in dire need of the boost that comes from lower borrowing costs.
Finally, there’s the BoE. Like the Fed, it’s expected to sit on its hands this week. Inflation in the UK, after all, is still double the central bank’s 2% target, so it’s going to want to see that mellow out a bit more before it takes a knife to interest rates. And with data last week showing that Britain’s economy had begun growing again in January after a short, mild recession, the BoE will know that it can also take a slow, calculated approach as it weighs up all the factors and makes a careful decision.