BOJ relaxes grip on rates as end to yield control looms

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By Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto

TOKYO (Reuters) -The Bank of Japan further loosened its grip on long-term interest rates by tweaking its bond yield control policy again on Tuesday, taking another small step towards dismantling its controversial monetary stimulus of the past decade.

While it kept ultra-low interest rates steady, the BOJ watered down its 1% cap on the 10-year bond yield which it set just three months ago to allow long-term borrowing costs to rise more.

The bank's nine-member board also revised up its price forecasts to project inflation will well exceed its 2% target this year and next, underscoring a growing conviction that conditions for phasing out its super-loose policy are falling into place.

But the yen tumbled against the dollar after the decision as traders focused on the BOJ's dovish pledge to "patiently" maintain accommodative policy and forecast inflation would drop back below 2% in 2025.

"We still haven't seen enough evidence to feel confident that trend inflation will (sustainably hit 2%)," BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda told a press briefing after the decision. "As such, we don't see a big risk of being behind the curve."

As widely expected, the BOJ maintained its -0.1% target for short-term interest rates and that for the 10-year government bond yield around 0% set under yield curve control (YCC).

But it re-defined 1% on the 10-year yield as a loose "upper bound" rather than a rigid cap, and removed a pledge to defend the level with offers to buy unlimited amount of bonds.

The BOJ had effectively capped the benchmark yield at 0.5% until July, when it raised the de-facto ceiling to 1% to iron out market distortions caused by years of huge bond buying.

The decision highlights how rising global bond yields and persistent inflation are making it increasingly difficult for the BOJ to maintain its controversial bond yield control.

The BOJ stuck to its view of a modest recovery in the world's third-largest economy, though it warned of "extremely high" uncertainty on the outlook due to risks such as the fallout from slowing global demand.

Ueda said the BOJ will no longer forcefully cap long-term rates at 1% but step in to avoid the 10-year yield from sharply moving above that level, adding that the tweak was aimed at making YCC more flexible.

"Through all the linguistic contortions, the fact is that they are dismantling YCC," said Tom Nash, portfolio manager at UBS Asset Management in Sydney, who is positioned for a rise in Japanese yields.