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BOJ's Kuroda says ready to use every possible tool to hit price goal

Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda attends a news conference at the BOJ headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, September 21, 2016. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

By Leika Kihara OSAKA (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, in his first speech since the BOJ's decision last week to overhaul its radical stimulus programme, said the central bank stood ready to use every available tool to achieve its 2 percent inflation target. While the BOJ would be mindful of the impact ultra-easy policy could have on banks' profits, that would not prevent it from expanding stimulus further if needed to revive Japan's economy. "There is no better opportunity than now to completely get out of deflation. Talking about the limits of monetary policy does not help at all," Kuroda said in a speech on Monday to business leaders in Osaka, western Japan. "There is no limit to monetary policy," he said. "In designing monetary policy, the BOJ will relentlessly pursue innovation and never hesitate to challenge." The BOJ made an abrupt shift last week to targetting interest rates on government bonds to achieve its elusive inflation target, after years of massive money printing failed to jolt the economy out of decades-long stagnation. Under the new framework, the BOJ's main means for monetary easing would be to deepen negative interest rates from the current minus 0.1 percent, or lower its 10-year government bond yield target - now set at around zero percent, Kuroda said. The pace of the BOJ's bond purchases could fluctuate depending on how much the central bank needed to buy to achieve its yield curve target, Kuroda said. But such changes in the amount of bond purchases would have no policy implications, he added, hosing down market speculation the BOJ was eyeing a future tapering of asset purchases. The BOJ may instead top up asset purchases or accelerate base money expansion, if economic and price conditions warranted such "powerful" monetary easing, he said. "The BOJ stands ready to use every possible policy tool, if it judges necessary to achieve its objectives," Kuroda said. On Wednesday, the BOJ dropped its previous target of increasing base money at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen (612 billion pounds), a move analysts saw as an acknowledgement that its huge bond buying programme was reaching its limits. The BOJ said it will keep buying bonds at the current pace for the time being, but warned that the pace could slow in the future as long as it could achieve the yield target. Several corporate executives present at the meeting complained about the yen's recent ascent to a one-month high, saying that it could hurt their export-reliant businesses. Kuroda said he would watch closely how recent yen gains could affect Japan's economy, and warned of lingering overseas uncertainties that could cloud prospects of Japan's recovery. "It's basically desirable for currency rates to move stably reflecting economic fundamentals," Kuroda said, stressing that it was a shared understanding among Group of 20 nations that excess volatility and disorderly currency moves hurt growth. (Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Eric Meijer)