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The Cabinet Office outlined the central bank's latest move, emphasizing a stable path toward hitting the price target. But here's where it gets interesting—one official flagged a critical concern: capital expenditure and profit margins warrant close monitoring going forward.
On the brighter side? Real wages might actually swing positive in the first half of next year. That's a potential game-changer for consumer confidence and spending patterns.
Perhaps more importantly for growth prospects, government stimulus is expected to prop up economic expansion for the next one to two years. In a macro environment like this, the timeline matters. It gives investors a window to gauge how long policy tailwinds will keep markets supported before underlying fundamentals need to take the wheel.
Will real wages turn positive in the first half of next year? They're hyping it up quite a bit. Believe it or not, I'll just wait and see.
Stimulus policies support for a year or two? The problem is, what happens after that... The fundamentals have to stand on their own eventually, right?
Betting on a wage increase next year? It still feels like a mirage; I’d rather stick to my own core assets.
This wave of policy dividends has a short duration; the market needs to find an exit strategy in advance.
Will actual wages turn positive in the first half of next year? If that really happens, consumption will definitely pick up.
But the key is how long the policy support can hold up over these two years; once the fundamentals strengthen on their own, that will be quite something.
Will wages increase in the first half of next year? Just listen, the key is whether purchasing power can increase.
Honestly, it's still about relying on policies to survive for another year or two. What happens after the wind stops blowing?