Japan’s Corporate Service Price Index rose 2.6% year on year in January. The rate was unchanged from the previous reading.
The update was reported on 24 February 2026 at 23:52:45 GMT. The source was the FXStreet Team.
BoJ Policy Implications
The corporate service price index holding firm at 2.6% shows that inflationary pressures in Japan are not fading. This stickiness is exactly what the Bank of Japan has been watching, making a policy change feel more likely. We see this as increasing the probability of a rate hike in the near future.
This service inflation aligns with the national core CPI for January, which we saw come in at 2.8% last week. Looking back at 2025, we remember the Shunto wage negotiations delivered the largest pay hikes in three decades. The ongoing 2026 talks are expected to yield similar results, further fueling service-driven price rises.
Attention is now firmly fixed on the Bank of Japan’s meeting scheduled for March 18th. The market is pricing in a higher chance of a move, which we can see in the 10-year JGB yield testing the 1.10% level. This is a significant resistance point since the end of yield curve control late in 2025.
For currency traders, this data supports positioning for a stronger yen, potentially pushing USD/JPY lower. We are seeing increased interest in buying downside protection on USD/JPY or outright JPY calls. Implied volatility on one-month options has already climbed to 9.5% this week, suggesting the market is preparing for a move.
Rates Market Positioning
In the rates market, the outlook favors paying fixed on short-term yen interest rate swaps to hedge against, or profit from, rising overnight rates. Similarly, positioning for a fall in Japanese government bond prices via futures could be considered. These trades directly reflect the growing expectation of the BoJ finally ending its negative interest rate policy.