* BOJ will take 'wait-and-see' approach on bond buying for now

* Prospects of prolonged low rates in Japan pushes down yen

* Japan's finance minister jawbones markets against weak yen

* Gauge of trend inflation slows sharply in Japan

TOKYO, March 22 (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the central bank will eventually scale back bond purchases and allow market forces to set long-term interest rate moves, signalling his resolve to move steadily towards normalising ultra-loose monetary policy.

The BOJ ended eight years of negative interest rates and other remnants of its unorthodox policy on Tuesday, making a historic shift away from decades of massive monetary stimulus that was aimed at reviving the economy and quashing deflation.

While the central bank also ditched its bond yield control, it pledged to maintain the monthly pace of bond purchases at roughly 6 trillion yen ($39.6 billion) for the time being.

"We've been intervening in the government bond market quite heavily. We would like to decrease our bond buying in the future," Ueda told parliament. "But for now, we'd like to take a wait-and-see approach to see how markets absorb our new policy."

The remarks came as expectations of prolonged ultra-low interest rates in Japan pushed the yen to fresh multi-month lows, adding to headaches for policymakers worried about the hit to consumption from a renewed rise in imported fuel costs.

Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki repeated his warning against sharp yen declines on Friday, saying that authorities were watching currency moves with "a high sense of urgency."

But he refrained on commenting on whether Tokyo could intervene in the currency market to stem the yen's declines.

At around 151.50 to the dollar, the yen is hovering around levels when Tokyo last intervened in the market to prop up the Japanese currency in 2022.

The yen's recent moves underscore the dilemma Japan faces. With the economy's recovery fragile, the BOJ is wary of signalling the chance of steady rate hikes.

By stressing its resolve to avoid fast-pitched rate hikes, however, the BOJ is helping fuel an unwelcome decline in the yen that pushes up the cost of imports.

Even after Tuesday's historic BOJ decision to end negative rates, Japanese borrowing costs are still stuck around zero.

The overnight call rate, which is now the BOJ's new short-term target rate, was quoted at 0.074%, having turned positive for the first time in eight years on Thursday.

More than a half of economists expect the Bank of Japan will raise interest rates further this year, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, possibly taking them as high as 0.25%.

At Tuesday's news conference, Ueda has said the BOJ could hike rates again if inflation forecasts overshoot sharply, or if upside risks to the price outlook heighten significantly.

So far, the risk of a sharp inflation overshoot seems slim.

Core inflation accelerated in February but an index gauging the broader price trend slowed sharply, data showed on Friday, as food price rises moderated and services inflation steadied.

Wage developments also hold the key to the timing of Japan's next interest rate hike.

Last week's preliminary survey by Japan's labour union group Rengo showed big firms agreeing to hike wages by 5.28% for 2024, the heftiest pay hikes in 33 years.

A second-round survey that covers a larger number of firms will be released by Rengo later on Friday, which will likely offer clues on whether wage increases would be broad-based.

($1 = 151.5700 yen) (Reporting by Leika Kihara; Additional reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Kim Coghill and Sam Holmes)