EFTA01472973.pdf
dataset_10 PDF 156.3 KB • Feb 4, 2026 • 3 pages
Subject: DB James Malcolm: Are the BoJ shifting stance? Own some cheap
optionality
From: Daniel Sabba <
Date: Fri, 01 May 2015 10:15:37 -0400
To: jeffrey E. <jeevacation@ mail.com>
Cc: Paul Morris
Vahe Stepanian
Ariane Dwyer
Richard Kahn
Jeffrey — we wanted to share this note with you as it relates to what we
perceive to be your macro views.
James Malcolm is updating his view on the BoJ - he thinks there is now
material event risk for the July meeting which warrants some 3-month vol
premium on Yen assets and a close following of domestic data and news in the
interim. Is the BoJ stance shifting from "no-ease-unless-things-
worsen" to "ease-unless-things improve" mode ?
I think it makes a lot of sense to own some low delta, low premium $JPY
upside at the moment
We are axed to sell 50m$ payout of a 5th August expiry 133.15 One Touch at
just 8% (mid 5%)
So invest 4m$ upfront to make 50m$ if the level trades at any point during
the lifetime of the trade
Spot 119.95
Full piece attached below
From James Malcolm :
Minor tweaks or comments in recent BoJ reports suggest the central bank is
EFTA01472973
becoming more nervous about missing its inflation target a little over two
years after it was lifted and a radical new QE program to achieve it was
implemented. They suggest that if the economy does not pick up substantial
momentum over the next ten weeks additional easing may be warranted. The
July 15 monetary policy meeting is key as it provides for an interim
assessment of policy board member's price and growth forecasts, and comes
just after the Bank's quarterly Tankan and public opinion survey. Beyond the
hard data, these will show whether spending intentions and inflation
expectations are lifting in response to higher profits and wages absent the
consumption-tax drag.
What has changed? This week's semiannual Outlook for Economic Activity and
Prices report ('The Bank's View') replaced its assessment that "there are
downside risks" for prices with the starker phrase that "risks are skewed to
the downside." A research study on the impact of QE thus far, published
today, concluded that "in order to achieve the price stability target of 2%
in a stable manner, a further increase in inflation expectations is
necessary." It also said that while the overall results have been broadly in
line with expectations "... [the] demand component data for real GDP --
particularly private consumption -- point to considerably weaker
improvements than predicted," even if, on the other hand, actual increases
in corporate profits and employee income have noticably exceeded
expectations. And an empirical regime-switching model that researchers at
the Bank have have developed shows that the likelihood of a switch in
inflation to a 2% trend remains very low. In fact, it has turned down from
about 20% to 10% more recently, while the probability of the trend being at
1% has risen to about 55% from less than 20% pre-2013 (chart below). That is
good in so far as the probability of the trend being at zero has dropped
from stably more than 80% to less than 30% today, yet that is clearly not
something which Mr Kuroda will settle for.
For his part, the central bank chief is walking a tightrope. He has conceded
his much vaunted original 2-year timeframe will be missed due to inflation,
but clearly also feels like he cannot give the government any scope to relax
on their medium-term fiscal consolidation plan, as this was an explicit
precondition for the conduct and support of extraordinary monetary easing in
the first place. It warrants some 3-month vol premium on yen assets and a
particularly close following of domestic data and news in the interim. Both
mark a sharp shift from what was always likely to be a very quiet 4 or 5
months following last December's election.
fcid:1 =OFBBF4ABDFA987858f9e8a93df9386909@db.coml
http://www.boj.or.jp/en/mopo/outlook/gor1504a.pdf
http://www.boj.or.jp/en/research/wps_rev/rev_2015/data/rev15e03.pdf
https://www.boj.or.jp/en/research/wps_rev/wps_2015/data/wp15e03.pdf
EFTA01472974
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