Japan national CPI core accelerated to 1.0% yoy in February, up from 0.9% yoy and met expectation. That’s also the first time it hits 1% level since August 2014. The so called core-core CPI, CPI excluding fresh food and energy, rose to 0.5% yoy.
Newly appointed BoJ deputy governor Masazumi Wakatabe said in the parliament that the reading, especially the core-core CPI, showed that Japanese inflation expectation remain weak. He noted that “when compared to the United States or Europe, gains in Japan’s core-core CPI are insufficient.” He added that “what we can learn from this is that people still don’t believe inflation will reach 2 percent.” And, “inflation expectations are not anchored.”
And he pledged to “maintain the regime and stance we have in place for monetary policy to meet 2 percent inflation and to strengthen it if possible.”