(Updates prices as of 0800 GMT after BOJ governor's news
conference)
By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO, April 26 (Reuters) - Japanese government bond
futures rose in extended trading while bond yields declined and
the yen plumbed fresh 34-year lows on Friday after the Bank of
Japan confirmed that its bond purchase amounts would remain
unchanged for now.
Investors had been primed for a tapering of bond buying by
the central bank after Jiji news agency reported overnight that
policymakers would consider measures to reduce purchases at the
two-day policy meeting that concluded in the early Tokyo
afternoon.
In the end the BOJ kept its target rate unchanged as
expected but issued a simplified statement that removed a
reference to buying JGBs at a pace of about 6 trillion yen
($38.3 billion) per month, leaving some doubts in market
participants' minds about the fate of the bond-purchase program.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda made it clear in his evening news
conference though that the status quo would be maintained.
"There's no change from March," he said. "There was no
opposition from the board today on continuing to buy at the
current pace of roughly 6 trillion yen per month."
Benchmark 10-year JGB futures rose 0.46 to 144.39 as
of 0800 GMT, after slipping 0.22 at the end of the regular
session.
The five-year JGB yield sank 1.5 basis points
(bps) to 0.48%, after earlier touching the highest since April
2011 at 0.52%.
The 20-year JGB yield dropped 1.5 bps to 1.645% after
earlier climbing to 1.7%, a nearly six-month peak.
The two-year note hadn't traded following
Ueda's news conference, but had declined 0.5 bp to 0.295%
following the policy decision, after earlier climbing to 0.315%
for the first time since July 2009.
The dollar spiked as much as 0.76% to reach 156.825 yen
as Ueda spoke. It later tumbled briefly before
climbing back to around 156.5, with traders unsure whether the
momentary drop was due to intervention.
The failure of the BOJ to lay out a plan for so-called
quantitative tightening (QT) left the market "with a bit of a
surprise," so "it was natural" for bonds to be bought back, said
Naka Matsuzawa, chief Japan macro strategist at Nomura
Securities.
"At the very least, the amendments made to the statement at
this meeting cannot be called a declaration to start reducing
government bond purchases."
Other JGB tenors also hadn't traded following Ueda's news
conference, but the 10-year JGB yield had pared
an early rise to 0.93%, the highest since Nov. 3, to last change
hands at 0.925%.
The 30-year yield was 1 bp higher at 1.96%.
($1 = 156.5600 yen)