Japan bond outflows surge as oil prices raise inflation worries

Foreign investors significantly offloaded Japanese bonds, totaling over 1.8 trillion yen in the week ending April 25, driven by inflation fears from soaring oil prices and anticipation of the Bank of Japan's policy stance. Despite this, they conti...

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Foreign investors offloaded Japanese bonds significantly. This move stemmed from concerns over rising oil prices and inflation.
Foreign investors sold Japanese bonds heavily in the week through April 25 on inflationary worries due to rising oil prices and caution ahead of the policy decision by the Bank of Japan.

Foreigners ditched a net 786.9 ‌billion yen ($5.01 billion)worth ⁠of ⁠Japanese long-term bonds, a significant rise from 294.7 billion yen in net sales the prior week. They also shed short-term bonds of a net 1.12 trillion yen, data from Japan's Ministry of Finance showed on Friday.

The BOJ on Tuesday kept interest ⁠rates steady ‌but three of the nine-member board proposed a hike, signaling policymakers' concerns over inflationary ⁠pressures from a rise in oil prices.


The 10-year Japanese government bond yield reached a 29-year high of 2.525% on Thursday as oil prices surged to a four-year high amid a stalemate in the U.S.-Iran peace negotiations.

Foreigners, meanwhile, bought 807.9 billion yen of Japanese stocks as they ‌extended the recent buying streak into a fourth straight week. Foreigners pumped roughly 10.08 billion yen into these ⁠stocks, in these four successive weeks.

At the same time, Japanese investors bought a net 41.2 billion yen of foreign stocks and remained net buyers for the 10th straight week.
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They, however, ditched foreign long-term bonds of 887.7 billion yen and short-term instruments of 263.8 billion yen. ($1 = 157.1300 yen)
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