Japan ETFs Strengthen as BOJ Reins in Loose Monetary Policy

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This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

Japan ETFs strengthened Monday, with a financial sector-specific play leading the charge, after the Bank of Japan signaled it was looking to ease back on its aggressively accommodative monetary policy.

The WisdomTree Japan Hedged Financials Fund (DXJF) , which tracks the Japanese financial sector and hedges against a depreciating yen currency, jumped 3.3% Monday and was testing its short-term resistance at the 50-day simple moving average. Meanwhile, the iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ) , the largest Japan-related ETF on the market, was 0.5% higher.

Japanese financial stocks were among the better performers Monday as the banks eyed potentially rising yields on latter dated debt securities.

There was rising speculation that the BOJ was debating moves to scale back its massive monetary stimulus policy, Reuters reports. Officials were holding preliminary discussions on possible changes, which include adjustments to interest rate targets and stock-buying techniques, along with ways to make its stimulus program more sustainable.

BOJ Expectations

The report of the BOJ’s deliberations raised expectations the central bank would end some of its accommodative monetary policy, lifting the benchmark 10-year yield as much as six basis points to 0.090%, a level not seen since early February.

“Whatever explanation the BOJ makes, if it makes policy adjustments that will lead to higher rates, that will make market players aware that the BOJ is in the phase of withdrawal from its massive stimulus,” Takafumi Yamawaki, head of currency and fixed income research at J.P. Morgan Securities, told Reuters.

Related: Global Stock Markets Perk Up as Investors Consider

The BOJ could adjust its current policy as early as its next meeting next week.

The potential withdrawal from the BOJ's aggressive monetary policy could help lift debt yields and support the financial industry. The ongoing negative rates and persistently low bond yields have cut into profits of the country's banks, especially regional institutions that serve a declining domestic population.

For more information on the Japanese markets, visit our Japan category.

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