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Saturday, April 6

6th Apr - Special: Bank of Japan

This is just a collection of all the links on the Bank of Japan's move that I've posted earlier - for your convenience. Last update 11-Apr 19:00 GMT




Previously on MoreLiver’s:


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Bank of Japan scraps overnight call rate, sets base money as new target Reuters
The BoJ decided on a radical overhaul of its policy framework on Thursday, shifting its target when setting monetary policy to base money from the current overnight call rate.

Bank of Japan Boosts Bond Purchases as Kuroda Takes HelmBB
With Kuroda presiding over his first meeting since taking the helm last month, the board today streamlined its asset purchase programs, temporarily suspended a cap on some bond holdings and dropped a limit on debt maturities. The BOJ will buy 7 trillion yen ($74 billion) of bonds a month, the central bank said in a statement.

Presenting… the new BoJalphaville / FT
This sort of initial euphoria has fizzled out before — but the new Bank of Japan governors appear to have actually come through with the goods

Bank of
Japan Launches Easing CampaignWSJ

Bank of Japan Launches Strong Easing CampaignWSJ

BoJ Unveils 'Shock-And-Awe' Quantitative-Qualitative EasingZH

Yen Falls Versus Peers as BOJ Purchases Exceed ForecastsBB

Koo: Currency Markets Are Misinterpreting the Impact of QEPragCap

Japan: Don't fight KurodaDanske Bank (pdf)
The new Bank of Japan (BoJ) governor Haruhiko Kuroda definitely left his mark in connection with today’s monetary meeting, at which BoJ announced easing measures that far exceeded market expectations. The main messages from the meeting are BoJ’s strong commitment to its 2% inflation target and that aggressive monetary easing will be continued next year. This suggests that JPY will continue to depreciate.

Kuroda's "Shock And Awe" Post-Mortem From Goldman And SocGenZH

BoJ revolution: five things you need to knowMoney Supply / FT

Kuroda follows the path of Volcker and GreenspanThe A-List / FT
Stephen King: So far, so good. The commitment is most definitely there and the ambition has now been well-defined. Yet Japan is not yet out of deflationary trouble and, even in the event of the monetary equivalent of the Great Escape, it might still all end in disappointment.

Bank of Japan Getting Better at Playing With MarketsWSJ

The BoJ massivealphaville / FT
For those who need a rundown of what the BoJ actually did, here’s a summary from Nomura:

Check Out Yen’s Explosive Move After BOJ MeetingMarketBeat / WSJ
Make no mistake, the Bank of Japan just pulled out all the stops to boost its flailing economy.

Abe’s European spring breakMacroScope / Reuters
Japan stimulus sends euro zone yields to record lows

Kuroda’s move will unleash copycat loosening – The A-List / FT
With the announcement by Haruhiko Kuroda, the Bank of Japan’s new governor, of the doubling of the monetary base within the next two years at most, the Japanese authorities committed to do “whatever it takes” to achieve their newly assigned objective — an inflation rate of 2 per cent. Two questions should be raised. First, why such a drastic step up in monetary expansion? Second, will it work?

Japan: A cunning plan Buttonwood’s / The Economist
Generate inflation and consumers will start spending, business confidence will improve and growth will resume. This will reduce the government's annual deficit and reduce the real value of the debt over time. Problem solved. But what about investors?

Abenomics Takes Off: Can Japan Un-Doom Itself?The Atlantic
14 years later, Japan is finally taking Ben Bernanke's advice

The Promise of AbenomicsProject Syndicate
Joseph E. Stiglitz: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is doing what many economists have been calling for in the US and Europe: a comprehensive program entailing monetary, fiscal, and structural policies. As many Japanese rightly sense, Abenomics, with its focus on monetary, fiscal, and structural policies, can only help the country’s recovery.

Abenomics is the only way to stop Japan's debt compound crisis The Telegraph
Those who say Japan has been muddling through just fine in permanent deflation with an overvalued yen are indeed "macro-tourists". No nation can allow itself to atrophy in this way. The surprise is that it took Japan so long to wake up.

Daily Interest Rate MonitorGlobal Macro Monitor

RecapGlobal Macro Trading


Japan stimulus will start currency war, say Chinese economistsSCMP

Plan to buy bonds will open liquidity floodgates and spells doom for other nations, observers say
 
Japanese FinMin Warns Surge In JGB Volatility May Lead To A Sharp Bond SelloffZH


Nikkei 63,000,000 And Other Flashbacks: The Complete Dylan Grice Japan SeriesZH

24-page research note.



Japan Bond Market Halted For Second Day In A RowZH

BofJ’s ‘Shock and Yen’ Policy Helps Markets Outside Japan, TooMarketBeat / WSJ



Why Japan is the most interesting story in global economics right nowWonkblog / WP

If everything works as planned, Japan’s industrial will return on the back of a weaker yen, an improving economy will improve its deficit picture, and the nation will soon have a goldilocks economy of prices rising about 2 percent a year and debt to GDP levels coming down. If things go awry, we could soon be staring at the mother of all sovereign debt crises.

Abenomics and AsiaProject Syndicate
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic agenda seems to be working for his country. The question now is whether Abenomics can achieve its goals without destabilizing the world economy, especially neighboring Asian economies.


Why Abenomics MattersCFR



Be excited, be, be excited: BoJ editionalphaville / FT


Yen Surges As Japan's Deputy PM Says Excessive Yen Gain "Corrected"ZH

Guest post: QE on steroids in Japanalphaville / FT

Front-Running Markets Get Carried Away By Bank of JapanWSJ

“For every Japanese investor seeking yield, there is a foreign one searching for returns from Japanese equities”



Mr Soros Trumps Mrs Watanabe ZH
The bulk of JPY selling pressure has come during non-Tokyo trading hours,

Japan’s currency war has just begunMacroBusiness
Global macro UBS analyst, Syed Mansoor Mohi-uddin, has a very neat little note out this morning summarising the revolution that has just taken hold of Japanese monetary policy

Taking QE to a whole new levelSober Look


Displaced JGB InvestorsMarc to Market

What the Bank of Japan is doing is not unprecedented. Rather it is the pace of its asset purchases that is striking.

Joseph Stiglitz : Why Abenomics will workThe Sydney Morning Herald

Monetary Policy In A Liquidity TrapKrugman / NYT
The hope now is that things have changed enough at the Bank of Japan that this time it can, as I put it all those years ago, “credibly promise to be irresponsible”.

Is the Yen overdone — not even close!Peter Brandt



Quantitative and qualitative monetary easingBIS (pdf)
Speech by Mr Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, at a meeting held by the Yomiuri International Economic Society, Tokyo, 12 April 2013.

Japan's Full Frontal: Charting Abenomics So FarZH

Inflation in Japan: mission (partially) accomplishedalphaville / FT

Japan: Revolution in the airThe Economist
After the central bank’s radical moves, now is the time for the prime minister to show his mettle