Rising inflation and surging bond yields are pushing the Bank of Japan toward another rate hike, with markets now pricing a move from 1% to 1.25% as early as October.
Rising inflation and surging bond yields are pushing the Bank of Japan toward another rate hike, with markets now pricing a move from 1% to 1.25% as early as October.

Rising inflation and surging bond yields are pushing the Bank of Japan toward another rate hike, with markets now pricing a move from 1% to 1.25% as early as October.
Japan's producer prices surged 7.1% in June, the fastest pace in years, while 10-year government bond yields climbed to 2.90% — a level not seen since September 1996 — building the case for the Bank of Japan to raise its policy rate from 1% later this year.
"The combination of rising import costs, elevated energy prices and multi-decade high bond yields creates a compelling argument for another rate hike," said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis. "But the BOJ may still wait for stronger wage growth and consumer inflation before acting."
Fuel prices jumped 22.8% and non-ferrous metal prices surged 39.2%, pushing the producer price index well above the 6.8% consensus estimate and the upwardly revised 6.6% gain in May. Import costs rose 12.5% to JPY 9.89 trillion in May as a persistently weak yen amplified the price of energy and raw materials. The yield curve has steepened sharply: the 20-year JGB yield reached 3.89%, the 30-year hit 4.03% and the 40-year climbed to 4.055%, while the 2-year yield stood at 1.445% and the 5-year at 1.99%.
A rate hike from 1% to 1.25% would narrow the U.S.-Japan yield differential and could trigger an unwind of yen-funded carry trades, potentially sending USDJPY toward 175 if the BOJ delays, or reversing the pair sharply if it delivers hawkish guidance. The BOJ's next policy meeting is scheduled for October, with 43% of economists in a January Reuters poll expecting a hike by July and 27% by June, though the timeline has shifted as inflation persists.
Inflation Pressures Build Across the Supply Chain
The June PPI data marks the latest sign that cost pressures are migrating from wholesale to consumer prices. Japan's import-dependent economy has been hit by a double blow: a yen that remains near multi-decade lows against the dollar and elevated global energy costs stemming from the Middle East conflict. Non-ferrous metal prices have been lifted by AI-related material demand, adding another layer of input cost pressure that businesses are now passing through to customers faster than in prior cycles.
The bond market is pricing in sustained inflation risk. The 10-year JGB yield rose for nine consecutive sessions through early July, reflecting investor demand for greater compensation for long-term inflation and concerns about Japan's fiscal health under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's spending plans. The 20-year, 30-year and 40-year yields all pushed above 3.8%, levels that suggest the market doubts the BOJ can keep policy loose without fueling further price increases.
Yen Carry Trade at a Crossroads
The interest rate outlook creates a mixed environment for USDJPY. Higher Japanese yields should theoretically support the yen, and the narrowing yield gap with the U.S. reduces the dollar's rate advantage. But the dollar retains a meaningful yield premium, and the yen's weakness continues to feed import-driven inflation in a self-reinforcing cycle.
From a technical perspective, USDJPY is consolidating between 160 and 162, compressing within an ascending broadening wedge pattern on the 4-hour chart. A break above 163.70 would open the door for a rally toward 175, defined by the ascending channel extending from the 2023 lows. Support sits at 160.30, with any correction viewed as a buying opportunity.
GBPJPY has broken above 216.30 after forming an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern from January to April 2026, with support at 215.60 to 216.30 and a break above 218 likely to push the pair higher. EURJPY remains supported by its 200-day SMA at 182.80, with immediate support at 183.50 and a target of 190.50 as long as the 180 level holds.
What Comes Next for the BOJ
The central bank faces a delicate balancing act. A rate hike would help stabilize the yen and curb import-driven inflation, but it risks slowing an economy that Natixis expects to grow just 0.9% in 2026, down from 1.3% in 2025, dragged by U.S. tariffs and tensions with China. BOJ board member Asada has signaled he needs to see demand-driven inflation before supporting a hike, suggesting internal divisions remain.
If the BOJ hints at an October increase, the yen could strengthen sharply, potentially triggering a broader unwind of carry trades that have kept USDJPY, GBPJPY and EURJPY elevated. If it delays, the dollar-yen pair could accelerate toward 175, keeping import costs high and prolonging the inflation cycle the BOJ is trying to contain.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.