Abstract:The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is facing a critical credibility test as bond markets signal that the central bank is dangerously behind the inflation curve.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is facing a critical credibility test as bond markets signal that the central bank is dangerously behind the inflation curve.
Following a dismal bond auction on December 25, the yield on 2-year Japanese Government Bonds (JGB) surged 2.5 basis points to 1.125%, a level not seen since 1996.
The auction's bid-to-cover ratio—a key gauge of demand—collapsed to 3.26, significantly below the 12-month average of 3.65. This rejection by investors signals deep unease with the BOJs gradualist approach. Markets are effectively “shorting” the BOJ's guidance, betting that persistent inflation will force Governor Ueda to hike rates aggressively before the projected September 2026 timeline.
The pressure is compounded by inflation expectations. The 10-year break-even inflation rate has hit its highest level since data collection began in 2004. Unlike previous bouts of cost-push inflation, the current environment suggests entrenched price pressures that current policy settings cannot contain.
“Investors are avoiding the 2-year sector because the risk of immediate capital loss from a hawkish BOJ surprise is too high,” notes Miki Den, Senior Rates Strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.

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