KONTAN.CO.ID - TOKYO. The Bank of Japan has room to deepen negative interest rates, Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Tuesday, but he signalled there were limits to how far it can cut rates or ramp up stimulus. Kuroda shrugged off the view held by some critics that the BOJ had run out of tools to expand an already massive stimulus, saying there was consensus within the central bank that it can deepen negative rates beyond the current -0.1%. But he said the BOJ must carefully weigh the benefits and costs of further easing, suggesting the hurdle for expanding stimulus has risen due to the cost of prolonged easing, such as the effect it has on financial institutions' profits.
"There is plenty of scope to deepen negative rates from the current -0.1%," Kuroda told a semi-annual parliament testimony on monetary policy. "But I've never said there are no limits to how much we can deepen negative rates, or that we have unlimited means to ease policy," he said. Read Also: U.S. grants Huawei new 90-day license extension Kuroda also said there was still enough Japanese government bonds (JGB) left in the market for the BOJ to buy, playing down concerns its huge purchases have drained market liquidity. After years of heavy purchases to flood markets with cash, the BOJ now owns nearly half of the JGB market. On Japan's economy, Kuroda repeated his view it will likely continue expanding but warned of the potential fallout from slowing global growth.