BOJ's Kuroda: We're not brewing a bubble

BOJ's Kuroda: We're not brewing a bubble

Tokyo stocks are at fifteen-year highs and the yen at eight-year lows, but Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told CNBC he doesn't think a bubble is brewing nor is he worried about where the yen (: OSEJPY=) is headed.

"We don't think there is any asset bubble or stock market bubble, but we will continue to monitor carefully," BOJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda told CNBC in an exclusive interview. As for the Japanese currency, the "yen might appreciate. But I think the exchange rate, including the yen, should move in line with economic fundamentals," he said.

A former Ministry of Finance official, Kuroda was appointed as the governor of Japan's central bank in March 2013 with one clear mandate: to jolt Japan out of decades of deflation and bring about inflation of two percent.

Kuroda has pursued an unprecedented monetary easing program since April 2013, which has triggered a stock market rally. The Nikkei (CBOE: .NKXQ) opened at a fresh fifteen-year high on Thursday morning, trading up 0.76 percent at 20,623. But while the yen has weakened, the monetary easing has so far failed to stimulate any inflation.

To the contrary, many economists are forecasting that Japan will slip back into deflation over the coming months.

Kuroda, however, is sticking to his two percent inflation target, if not the timeline. The BOJ recently postponed its target date to the fiscal year 2016, from 2015.

"Our target is 2 percent consumer price inflation (CPI) and not just touching 2 percent, but [that] inflation should stay at 2 percent for the coming years," he said. "And as you know almost all major central banks aim at 2 percent...I think the target is reasonable."

Weaker currencies for weaker economies

The yen has depreciated nearly thirty percent since the BOJ launched its quantitative easing (QE) program last year and the U.S. dollar was fetching 123.74 yen in early Asia trading time after the Japanese currency tapped eight year-lows.

The governor insisted that many factors, not just monetary policy, cause currency movements.

"Although the dollar has recently appreciated against the euro and yen, our monetary policy has not changed since April 2014, [and] we have been implementing so-called QE faithfully and in the meantime, the exchange rate fluctuated," he said.

The yen has in fact been depreciating since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who appointed Kuroda, was returned to power in the December 2012 elections. In the months running up to Abe's re-election, the yen was still trading at around 80 against the U.S dollar, at 17-year highs.

But while Kuroda said the BOJ's policies aren't the only driver of the yen, the currency has swooned every time the central bank has eased.

In the month following the first QE announcement, the yen depreciated by nearly eight percent, and by over 12 percent in the month after the program was expanded at the end of October 2014.

QE until growth cometh

Still, Kuroda insisted that weaker economies will need to keep the QE tap turned on to simulate growth and inflation.

"The [U.S.] Federal Reserve is likely to normalize its monetary policies because the U.S. economy is the strongest among the three economies. The Eurozone and Japan's economies are not as strong as U.S.'s, so I think Europe and Japan will continue QE for some time," he said.

One sign of how the BOJ's QE program is doing will come on Friday, when April's consumer price data will be released. The median forecast is for a 0.20 percent on-year rise in core nationwide consumer prices, according to a Reuters poll of 21 economists.

Many economists are predicting the central bank will have to expand its QE program again as early as in October, to demonstrate its renewed commitment to its 2 percent inflation target.



More From CNBC