Saturday, March 30, 2013

Monetary Policy Week in Review – Mar 30, 2013: Chance of global crises eases as 3 banks cut rates, 8 hold, 1 raises


    Last week 12 central banks took policy decisions with three banks cutting rates (Vietnam, Hungary and Georgia), eight keeping rates on hold (Israel, Angola, Turkey, Morocco, Taiwan, Zambia, Czech Republic and Romania) and Tunisia becoming the fifth central bank to raise rates this year.
    The main message gleaned from central banks last week was that the global economy continues to recover, but every time it seems to pick up a little steam, confidence is undermined by developments in Europe, the only major risk to a sustained recovery. 
    But like a resilient boxer, the global economy dusts itself off and gets back on its feet, adjusting to the fact that large bank depositors in Europe may have to share the costs of future bank bailouts with tax payers, the main lesson from Cyprus.
    After the shock from this major but ultimately positive policy shift, there was a sense of relief that Europe had muddled through, once again, and financial markets had taken the events in stride.
     “It appears that there has been a decline in the probability of a crises occurring, a development which has reduced the high level of uncertainty that prevailed in the last year,” the Bank of Israel said in its statement.
    But as both Israel and the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) acknowledged, the global economic picture remains mixed and “it is too early to say whether the improved market sentiment over the past six months is the beginning of a sustained recovery, or merely a temporary upswing.”
    The challenges facing Europe’s policy makers is considerable. Not only do they have to restore financial health to governments and banks, they must also find ways to strengthen economic growth at a time of growing challenges from emerging markets.
    “The renewed market tension associated with the handling of the sovereign and banking crisis in Cyprus in recent weeks has provided a reminder of the political, economic and social challenges of resolving the pervasive fiscal and banking sector problems,” the RBA said in its financial review.
     In the latest manifestation of the structural shift in the global economy – illustrated by a stagnating Europe and growing emerging markets - the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, and South Africa and China agreed to establish a New Development Bank.
    The leaders of these five countries, known as the BRICS countries, acknowledged that their infrastructure has to be improved but currently there is insufficient long-term and foreign investment in capital stock.
    Acknowledging their role and responsibility for global governance, the BRICS leaders said a bank, which now will be established, would use global financial resources more productively and thus make a positive contribution in boosting global demand.
    They also agreed to establish a $100 billion financial reserve arrangement that would "help BRICS countries forestall short-term liquidity pressures, provide mutual support and further strengthen financial stability," the leaders said in their March 27 Durban declaration.
     The Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) would help strengthen the global financial safety net during times of market turmoil.
         
    Through the first 13 weeks of the year, 77 percent of the 125 policy decisions taken by the 90 central banks followed by Central Bank News lead to unchanged rates, marginally down from 78 percent after the first 11 weeks.
    Globally, 19 percent of policy decisions this year have lead to rate cuts, largely by central banks in emerging economies, a ratio that was steady from last week.
    Of the 24 rate cuts worldwide so far this year, 42 percent have come from central banks in emerging markets and the remainder from frontier markets and other countries.
    No central banks in developed markets have cut rates this year, but this is largely because many of those central banks slashed rates to effectively zero five years ago and then switched to various forms of so-called quantitative easing to stimulate demand.

LAST WEEK’S (WEEK 13) MONETARY POLICY DECISIONS:
COUNTRY MSCI     NEW RATE           OLD RATE        1 YEAR AGO
ISRAEL DM 1.75% 1.75% 2.50%
VIETNAM FM 8.00% 9.00% 14.00%
ANGOLA 10.00% 10.00% 10.25%
TURKEY EM 5.50% 5.50% 5.75%
MOROCCO EM 3.00% 3.00% 3.00%
HUNGARY EM 5.00% 5.25% 7.00%
GEORGIA 4.50% 4.75% 6.50%
TAIWAN EM 1.88% 1.88% 1.88%
ZAMBIA 9.25% 9.25% 9.00%
CZECH REPUBLIC EM 0.05% 0.05% 0.75%
TUNISIA FM 4.00% 3.75% 3.50%
ROMANIA FM 5.25% 5.25% 5.25%

Next week (week 14) features six central bank policy decisions, including Australia, Thailand, Uganda, Japan, United Kingdom and the euro area.

COUNTRY MSCI          MEETING               RATE        1 YEAR AGO
AUSTRALIA DM 2-Apr 3.00% 4.25%
THAILAND EM 3-Apr 2.75% 3.00%
UGANDA 3-Apr 12.00% 21.00%
JAPAN DM 4-Apr 0.10% 0.10%
UNITED KINGDOM DM 4-Apr 0.50% 0.50%
EURO AREA DM 4-Apr 0.75% 1.00%




Thursday, March 28, 2013

Zambia holds rate steady, inflation to ease in April

    Zambia's central bank held its policy rate steady at 9.25 percent, saying inflationary pressures should continue to moderate in April due to improved seasonal supply of food, mainly fish, vegetables and beef.
    The Bank of Zambia, which raised its policy rate by 25 basis points in 2102 but has held them steady this year, added that a continued supply of maize to millers by the Food Reserve Agency should also help keep inflation low in April.
    "This notwithstanding, cost-push pressure associated with the lagged pass-through effects of the depreciation of the Kwacha are likely to pose upside risks to the inflation outlook for April 2014," the central bank said, adding these risks had been weighed in the decision to hold rates steady.
    Zambia's inflation rate fell to 6.6 percent in March from February's 6.9 percent.
    In 2012 Zambia's Gross Domestic Product expanded by 7.3 percent from 2011.

    www.CentralBankNews.info
   

Romania holds rate, sees inflation on downward trend

    Romania's central bank held its policy rate steady at 5.25 percent, saying inflation is expected to continue to follow a downward trend due to a persistent negative output gap and reach the ceiling of the central bank's inflation target by the end of this year.
    The National Bank of Romania (NBR), which has held rates steady since a 25 basis point cut in March 2012, said annual inflation fell to 5.65 percent in February from January's 5.97 percent. The adjusted core2 inflation rate was 3.1 percent in February, just below January's 3.2 percent.
    The NBR targets annual inflation of 2.5 percent, plus/minus one percentage point.
    Romania's Gross Domestic Product expanded by 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter from the third for annual growth of 0.3 percent, up from a 0.3 percent contraction in the third quarter.

Taiwan holds rate steady on mild recovery, muted inflation

    Taiwan's central bank held its benchmark interest rate steady at 1.875 percent, as expected, saying the current stance was appropriate as the country's economy was "experiencing a mild recovery along with muted inflationary pressures."
    The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan), which has held its discount rate unchanged since June 2011, said economic activity had picked up since the fourth quarter due to better-than-expected exports and private consumption.
    The government's budget, accounting and statistics directorate has revised upwards its forecast for first quarter Gross Domestic Product growth to 3.26 percent and "bolstered by the world's moderate economic expansion, exports and private investment will likely drive the domestic economy to grow by 3.92% in the second quarter and 3.59% for the entire year," the central bank said.
    In December, the bank said it forecast 2013 GDP growth of 3.15 percent.
    For the first two months of this year, consumer price inflation averaged 2.05 percent but core inflation only grew by 1.25 percent, the bank said.

Czech holds rate steady, zero until inflation pressures rise

    The Czech Republic's central bank left its benchmark two-week repo rate steady at 0.05 percent and said rates would remain at its current level of technically zero "over a longer horizon until inflation pressures increase significantly."
    In a statement following a meeting of the Czech National Bank (CNB) board, the bank said it was also ready to use foreign exchange interventions "if further monetary policy easing becomes necessary."
    The CNB, which cut rates by 70 basis points in 2012 but has held them steady this year, said its forecast calls for a slight decline in market interest rates and then a rise from mid-2014 and inflationary pressures are not expected to rise and there were "no tangible risks of such an increase in inflation pressures" at the present.
    Inflation in the Czech Republic fell to 1.7 percent in February from January's 1.9 percent. The CNB targets inflation of 2.0 percent, plus/minus one percentage point.
    The Czech economy more than forecast in the fourth quarter and in 2012 Gross Domestic Product shrank by 1.2 percent, the bank said.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Georgia cuts key rate 25 bps, inflation seen below target

    Georgia's central bank cut its benchmark refinancing rate by 25 basis points to 4.50 percent, its second rate cut this year, saying it had cut its inflation projection and now forecasts inflation to remain below the bank's target throughout this year and first approach it in the second half of 2014.
    The National Bank of Georgia, which started its monetary easing cycle in July 2011, said economic activity weakened at the end of last year, and lower demand is pushing the price level downwards.
    A slowdown in the growth of imports in January and February is another indication of a slowdown in domestic demand, the bank said.
    Georgia's consumer price inflation continued to drop in February as deflation maintained its grip on Georgia. Inflation was minus 2.12 percent in February, slightly up from January's minus 1.6 percent.
     Since February 2012, the inflation rate has only been positive in two months, October and July, with inflation rates of 0.56 percent and 0.1 percent, respectively.
    The central bank said its forecasts for inflation had dropped since the last meeting of its monetary policy committee, which targets inflation of 6 percent.

Central Bank News Link List - Mar 27, 2013: Cyprus capital controls first in EU could last years

Here's today's Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don't miss any important news.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Hungary to mull further rate cuts if inflation moderate

    Hungary's central bank, which earlier today cut its base rate for the eight time as expected, said it would consider cutting rates further as long as "medium-term inflationary pressures remain moderate and the uncertainty surrounding financial market developments diminishes."
    The policy guidance by The National Bank of Hungary is similar to its stance in recent months, signaling it is likely to continue its easing cycle that was begun in August 2012. Since then, the central bank has cut rates by 200 basis points and this year rates have been cut by 75 basis points.
    The central bank said there is still a significant degree of spare capacity in Hungary's economy and "inflationary pressure is likely to remain moderate in the medium term, and therefore the 3 percent target can be met with looser monetary conditions."
    It said that recent fluctuations in Hungarian asset prices could not be "justified by fundamental forces" and this warranted a cautious approach to policy.
    In its latest inflation report, the central bank estimated consumer price inflation of 2.6 percent in 2013, down from 2012's 5.7 percent and 2.8 percent in 2014. The central bank targets inflation of 3.0 percent.
    Hungary's inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in February from 3.7 percent in January.

Morocco holds rate, inflation subdued but forecast raised

    Morocco's central bank held its key rate steady at 3.0 percent, saying inflation remains subdued -despite a raised forecast - and in line with its target.
    The board of Bank Al-Maghrib said inflation is forecast to remain around 2.2 percent in 2013 and 1.6 percent in the second quarter of 2014, averaging 2.0 percent over the forecast horizon, "broadly in line with the objective of price stability in the medium term."
     Morocco's inflation rate eased to 2.2 percent in February from 2.6 percent in January and December while core inflation, which reflects the fundamental trend of price, remained below 1 percent, the Central Bank of Morocco said.
    In December the central bank estimated 2013 inflation of 1.7 percent and 1.5 percent in Q1 2014.
    Morocco's central bank has held rates steady since March 2012 when it cut rates by 25 basis points.

Hungary cuts base rate for eight time in a row to 5.0%


    Hungary's central bank cut its base rate by 25 basis points to 5.0 percent, it's eight rate cut in a row, the National Bank of Hungary (MNB) said in a brief statement.
    The rate cut was widely expected and it was the first council meeting chaired by the central bank's new president, Gyorgy Matolscy, former economy minister.
    The MNB has cut rates by 200 basis points since it embarked on its easing cycle in August 2012.
    Last month the central bank said it would consider cutting rates further if the outlook for inflation remains in line with its 3.0 percent target and the improvement in financial market sentiment is sustained.
    Hungary's inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in February from 3.7 percent in January
    Earlier today a spokesman for the bank told media that the bank would no longer hold press conferences after the monthly rate-setting meetings.
    Hungary's Gross Domestic Product contracted by 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter, it's fourth quarterly contraction in a row, for an annual shrinkage of 2.7 percent.

Central Bank News Link List - Mar 26, 2013: Cyprus banks remain closed to avert run on deposits

Here's today's Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don't miss any important news.