Bank of Japan Eyes Inflation, Yen Weakness Amid Energy Pressures; Business Sentiment Soars Despite Risks

April 1, 2026
Bank of Japan Eyes Inflation, Yen Weakness Amid Energy Pressures; Business Sentiment Soars Despite Risks
  • The Cabinet Office removed a reference to U.S. trade policy impacts from its headline assessment for the first time since April 2025, signaling a shift in emphasis.

  • Outlook indices for both manufacturing and non-manufacturing declined from late 2025 but still beat expectations, suggesting confidence tempered by future risks.

  • The government emphasizes monitoring supply chains and the domestic economy while maintaining a view of a moderate recovery, supported by consumption and corporate investment.

  • Manufacturing gains are driven by a robust semiconductor cycle, while sentiment weakens in commodity-related sectors like iron and steel and basic materials.

  • Industrial output fell 2.1% in February after a January rebound, highlighting uneven momentum in manufacturing.

  • The Bank of Japan is watching inflation and the yen's weakness closely, with analysts betting on a possible rate rise as import costs rise amid energy pressures.

  • Business sentiment among large manufacturers rose to 17 in the first quarter of 2026, the strongest since late 2021, signaling resilient morale despite geopolitical risks.

  • In the same survey, large non-manufacturers held steady at +36 in March, showing stable confidence across sectors.

  • The diffusion index measures the share of firms reporting good conditions minus those reporting bad conditions.

  • Soft spots appear in textiles, lumber, petroleum, and chemicals, indicating pockets of weakness within the broader economy.

  • A revised standard for calculating the diffusion index now underpins its forecasts after a recent survey review.

  • Analysts warn that temporary relief measures must be paired with credible, time-bound fiscal plans to protect debt sustainability and policy credibility.

Summary based on 53 sources


Get a daily email with more Macroeconomics stories

More Stories