Tokyo - Speculation mounted on Wednesday that Japan's central bank could cut its super-low interest rates this week to tackle a looming recession in Asia's largest economy.
It would be the first such move since March 2001 when the Bank of Japan introduced an unprecedented policy of almost free credit to try to pull the economy out of the deflationary doldrums.
The Bank of Japan "is leaning toward" reducing its key rate by 25 basis points to 0.25% following the recent plunge on the Tokyo stock market, the influential Nikkei business daily reported without naming its sources.
"The falling stock market is a very strong incentive for a rate cut. It is conceivable that the BoJ might reduce the rate to close to zero again eventually," said Tetsuro Okada, an economist at the Japan Research Institute.
The Japanese economy shrank in the second quarter of this year and there are increasing fears that it is once again in recession, which is usually defined as two straight quarters of economic contraction.
Japanese industrial output rose 1.2 % in September from the previous month, beating the market expectation of a 0.5% rise, official figures showed on Wednesday.
Lowest borrowing costs
But the gain came after a sharp 3.5% drop in August and the outlook remained gloomy, with the government forecasting a fall of 2.3% in October and a drop of 2.2% in November.
The bleak outlook is "another piece of evidence that the Bank of Japan could use to lower interest rates, if they so wish," said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JP Morgan Securities.
"The data show that the speed of economic slowdown has accelerated," he said.
Japan's economy relies heavily on exports and the weakness of the global economy is reducing demand for Japanese goods overseas. A stronger yen is also making Japanese exports less competitive.
The dollar, which was trading around ¥110 in August, fell to close to ¥90 last week, before rebounding to the ¥97 level in response to the Nikkei report.
But a rate cut would be mostly symbolic in Japan, which already has the lowest borrowing costs of the major economies, analysts said.
Japan's financial system may be relatively resilient amid the global credit crunch, "but a rate cut would demonstrate that Japan was doing something in coordination with the international community," Okada said.
The Nikkei index has dropped nearly 40% over the past three months amid the worst global financial crisis in decades.
The US Federal Reserve was widely expected to deliver another cut in its interest rates later on Wednesday and markets expect further interest rate cuts in Europe as well.
Analysts said that it was still uncertain whether the Bank of Japan would move this week.
"My guess is that the BoJ would take a step-by-step approach before actually cutting the rate," said Adachi of JP Morgan.
"If it lowers the rate, perhaps even back to the near-zero level, it means that the BoJ would not have any more room to reduce it further," he said.
- Sapa