Japan’s real wages rise for fourth month, strengthening the BOJ rate-hike case

最近のFX関連情報Central Banks

Japan's real wages rose 1.9% year-on-year in April, a fourth consecutive gain, while household spending beat forecasts, boosting the case for a BOJ rate hike at its June 15-16 meeting.

Summary: The following data were released by the Japanese government on June 5

Household spending, April: -0.5% year-on-year,

  • expected -1.5%, prior -2.9%;

month-on-month +1.6%,

  • expected +0.8%, prior -1.3%

Average cash earnings (total nominal wages), April: +3.5% year-on-year, the fastest growth since December 2024 and the third consecutive month above 3%, a streak not seen in over 34 years

  • expected +3.2%, prior +2.7%,

Overtime pay, April: +4.2% year-on-year,

  • expected +3.2%, prior +1.9%

Real wages rose 1.9% year-on-year in April, a fourth consecutive monthly gain, supported by a 7.4% surge in special payments, mostly one-time bonuses,

  • following a revised 0.7% fall in March, with full-time worker base pay exceeding 3% growth for a fourth straight month

Base salaries grew 3.4% year-on-year,

  • unchanged from the revised March figure,

The inflation rate used to calculate real wages eased to 1.5% in April from 1.6% in March, staying below the BOJ's 2% target for a fourth consecutive month; government subsidies have been offsetting rising import costs from a weak yen and elevated oil prices linked to the Iran war

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Japan's wages and household spending both beat forecasts in April, delivering a dataset that materially strengthens the Bank of Japan's case for another interest rate increase at its policy meeting later this month.

Real wages rose 1.9% year-on-year in April, extending a run of gains to four consecutive months. The result was driven in part by a sharp jump in special payments, largely one-time bonuses, which surged 7.4% after a revised 0.7% decline in March. But the strength was not confined to bonus payments. Nominal total cash earnings rose 3.5% year-on-year, above the 3.2% expected and faster than the revised 2.7% recorded in March. It was the fastest pace of nominal wage growth since December 2024 and, crucially, the third straight month in which growth has exceeded 3%, a streak that has not been sustained for more than 34 years.

Base salaries, which strip out the volatile bonus component and give a cleaner read on underlying wage momentum, grew 3.4% year-on-year, matching the revised March figure. For full-time workers, base pay has now grown above 3% for four consecutive months. Overtime pay added to the picture, rising 4.2% against an expectation of 3.2% and a prior reading of 1.9%.

Household spending reinforced the message. The year-on-year decline of 0.5% in April was far smaller than the 1.5% drop forecast and a significant improvement on the 2.9% fall recorded in March. On a month-on-month basis, spending rose 1.6%, double the 0.8% expected.

The inflation backdrop is also cooperating. The rate used to deflate wages for the real measure eased to 1.5% in April from 1.6% in March, staying below the BOJ's 2% target for a fourth consecutive month. Government energy subsidies have been helping to dampen headline price pressures, offsetting some of the upward push from a weak yen and elevated oil prices tied to the ongoing Iran conflict.

The BOJ has consistently said that sustained, broad-based wage growth alongside rising prices is the condition it needs to justify further policy normalisation. April's data, across virtually every measure, moves the needle in that direction ahead of the June 15-16 meeting.

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Four consecutive months of real wage growth, combined with household spending that beat forecasts on both measures, materially strengthens the BOJ's hand ahead of its June 15-16 policy meeting. Yen bulls will read the data as increasing the probability of a rate hike signal, if not an immediate move. The combination of nominal wage growth exceeding 3% for a third straight month, a run not seen in over 34 years, and easing inflation below the 2% target gives the BOJ the wage-price dynamic it has said is a prerequisite for tightening. Traders pricing rate differentials between the BOJ and the Fed will be watching closely.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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最近のFX関連情報Central Banks

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