KEY POINTS
  • Japan's longest-serving prime minister confirmed his intention to step down due to worsening health.
  • Now, despite Abe's planned departure, analysts expect a continuation of the country's reflationary policies.
  • The Abenomics policy of massive fiscal, monetary support and economic reforms "may not have achieved all of its aims, but it wasn't an unmitigated failure either, and Japan has made some important progress under his leadership," one Asia analyst said.

The surprise resignation of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is unlikely to mark an end to so-called Abenomics stimulus policies, analysts told CNBC on Friday.

Japan's longest-serving prime minister confirmed reports Friday that he intends to step down due to worsening health. Abe, who served as prime minister for nearly nine years, has battled ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease, for years but said his health started to deteriorate around the middle of last month.