Filtered by Topic: Monetary Policy Use setting Monetary Policy
This week’s plunge in the Nigerian naira marked the latest positive step by President Bola Tinubu as he seeks to overhaul the economy, but there are still plenty of reasons to be cautious that this policy shift marks a clean break from the Buhari-era. A …
16th June 2023
Brazil: shifting towards rate cuts? Expectations for interest rate cuts in Brazil have grown in light of recent developments, but, for now, we’re sticking with our view that Copom will hold off on lowering interest rates until November. The arguments in …
Note: We’ll be discussing the UK’s economic, housing market and policy outlook in light of the BoE’s June rate decision in an online briefing on 22nd June at 10:00 EDT/15:00 BST . Register now . The title of last week’s UK Economics Weekly was “Why …
More ground to cover The message from the ECB yesterday was decidedly hawkish. The Bank raised rates and more or less promised another hike in July, while the substantial upward revision to its inflation forecasts implied that further tightening could …
Monetary easing alone won’t suffice Data published this week made it clear that the reopening recovery has stalled. Momentum weakened almost across the board in May, and the labour market began to soften again. Broad credit growth also slowed sharply . …
Note: We’re talking inflation and the BOJ, slowing Indian growth, and regional monetary easing in our Asia Drop-In on Thursday, 22nd June. Register now . Latest inflation data support our rates cuts view The overarching message from our Q3 India Economic …
Could SAMA step in again to support credit growth? Interbank rates in Saudi Arabia are running at their highest since 2001 following the monetary policy tightening over the past year or so and, with lingering concerns over the banking sectors liquidity, …
15th June 2023
The fall in employment in May suggests the Bank might not need to follow its 25bp hike this week with another in July. But with employment among prime-age people continuing to rise strongly and house prices surging last month, we still suspect the Bank is …
9th June 2023
Petro crisis sparks rally in Colombian assets Colombia stumbles from political crisis to political crisis. After a major cabinet reshuffle in April, this week’s scandal included allegations of phone tapping and violation of campaign financing rules and …
Note: We’ll be discussing whether China’s post-zero-COVID recovery is already over in an online briefing at 09:00 BST/16:00 SGT on 15th June . Register now . Property support of limited use in isolation Stocks of Chinese property developers surged …
We expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged at next week’s FOMC meeting but, in what could be characterised as a “hawkish skip”, to signal via forward guidance (updated SEP forecasts and language in the statement) that officials are minded to hike …
Central Bank Drop-In (15th June): We’ll be discussing the Fed and ECB June decisions and previewing the Bank of England’s upcoming meeting in a 20-minute online briefing at 10:00 EDT/15:00 BST on Thursday . Register Now. We learnt this week that the …
Central Bank Drop-In (15 th June): We’ll be discussing the Fed and ECB June decisions and previewing the Bank of England’s upcoming meeting in a 20-minute online briefing at 10:00 EDT/15:00 BST on Thursday . Register Now. The OECD joined the ranks of the …
RBI hawkish, but inflation outlook improving The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) didn’t throw up any surprises when it kept the repo rate on hold at 6.50% this week. The move was widely expected and the muted reaction in local financial markets suggests that …
Rate hikes will drive double-dip housing downturn The big news this week was RBA Governor Lowe indicating that the Board’s patience to tolerate high inflation was waning. The Bank’s hawkish turn, coming at a time when unit labour costs are growing at …
The upside surprise to first-quarter GDP growth means there is a rising probability that the Bank of Canada will raise interest rates again. While the commonly held view seems to be that the Bank will wait until July, the passing of the US debt ceiling …
2nd June 2023
Colombia: baby steps towards sustainable growth Data out this week suggest that Colombia’s economy has started to undergo an adjustment process, albeit a gradual one. In an Update last week, we explained how Colombia’s unsustainably strong recovery had …
Debt ceiling ends not with a bang but a whimper The debt ceiling standoff ended not with a bang but a whimper – as the bill easily passed the House and Senate with comfortable majorities. In the end, the debt ceiling negotiations played out largely as …
Core inflation on its way down? Data published this week showed that euro-zone core inflation fell for the second consecutive month in May. (You can read our response to the data here or watch our Drop-in on the outlook for inflation, ECB policy and …
Revising up our GDP forecast for 2023 The activity data released this week suggest that the economy is holding up better than we had been anticipating. GDP growth accelerated from 4.5% y/y in Q4 2022 to 6.1% y/y in Q1 (Q4 of FY22/23). Based on our …
Korea set for a weak Q2, BoK still too optimistic While the economy avoided a technical recession in Q1 on the back of a sharp rise in automotive exports , activity data for April released this week showed that Korea’s economic woes are far from over. …
1st June 2023
CoreLogic data published earlier today showed that house prices continue to make gains in May, heightening risks to our long-held view that the housing downturn has further to run. If house prices do stabilise or rise higher, that in turn raises the …
Note: We’re discussing potential EM equity outperformance, monetary easing and “friend-shoring” in our next EM monthly online briefing on Thursday, 1 st June. Register here to join. Brazil’s fiscal framework gets strong support The approval of Brazil’s …
26th May 2023
The title of the UK Economic Outlook we published in March was “Recession needed to solve the inflation problem”. (See here .) The argument was that the drags from high inflation and a rise in interest rates to 4.50% would weaken activity and domestic …
Weak Q1, disappointing early data for Q2 Most countries in the region have now published Q1 GDP figures, and in the majority of places the data were weak as high interest rates and subdued demand from abroad weighed on growth. (See Chart 1.) The …
Tunisia’s central bank independence under fire A new wave of reforms supposedly laid out by Tunisia’s President Saied’s have taken aim at the central bank’s (BCT’s) mandate which could result in it being used for unorthodox measures. That would …
25th May 2023
The Bank of Canada’s latest Financial System Review reiterated the risks to households from higher interest rates, but concluded that most are coping well. Following the rapid turnaround in the housing market and upside surprise to CPI inflation in April, …
19th May 2023
SA: threat of AGOA loss no disaster, but unwelcome Allegations that South Africa has supplied arms to Russia has led to calls for the country to lose preferential trade access to the US via the African Growth and Opportunities Act (AGOA). As it happens, …
Recent solid activity data and the apparent progress on debt ceiling negotiations appear to have convinced some Fed officials that it is still too early to pause interest rate hikes. We still aren’t convinced the Fed will hike again in June, but there is …
Sweden inflation surprise As of this week, coverage of Switzerland and the Nordic economies will be incorporated, along with the euro-zone, in our expanded Europe Economics service. We will continue to analyse the economic data from the Nordics and …
Chinese government bonds have rallied over the past couple of months, with the 2-year yield falling over 20bps since mid-March. This reflects mounting expectations for monetary easing in response to what has widely been viewed as an underwhelming …
Productivity crunch creates dilemma for RBA The RBA has been ringing the alarm bells about dismal productivity gains for a while now. In the minutes of its May meeting, the Board noted that if productivity growth did not return to the modest pace recorded …
Some relief on the inflation front The past week or so has brought some positive news on the inflation front. Data from Brazil earlier today showed that the headline rate fell to a 30-month low in April. This followed data releases that showed falls in …
12th May 2023
It’s been a week to forget for South Africa, in which fears emerged that the improvement in the public finances is stalling and concerns about (even more) intense loadshedding surfaced. That was topped off by allegations that South Africa supplied weapons …
Yesterday’s 25 basis point rise in interest rates from 4.25% to 4.50% was widely expected in the end. But we’ve been forecasting that rates would rise to 4.50% since November last year. (See here .) The most striking thing coming out of yesterday’s …
Close call in the Philippines The central bank in the Philippines (BSP) has tightened monetary policy aggressively over the past year as it has tried to crack down on inflation, which has been much higher than in the rest of the region. Its meeting on …
Treasury won’t go on a spending spree Earlier this week, the Australian government boasted its first budget surplus in fifteen years. However, the picture in New Zealand is less rosy. The kiwi nation’s fiscal accounts are in worse shape than the …
Ueda leaves door open to acting before full review Bank of Japan Governor Ueda spoke on Tuesday in the Diet and mostly repeated what he said in the Bank’s post-meeting press conference on 28 th April, when he left monetary policy settings unchanged in his …
Colombia: inflation worries taking centre stage We had warned a few weeks ago that Colombia’s central bank (BanRep) was too sanguine on inflation risks and this week’s communications suggest that policymakers are coming round to our view. At last …
5th May 2023
Following the renewed concerns about regional US banks this week, markets are again pricing in interest rate cuts from the Bank of Canada later this year. From a domestic perspective, however, the strength of the local real estate board data in April and …
The April employment report showed that while jobs growth remains solid enough, it is still trending lower and the surveys suggest activity growth is slowing too. With ongoing concerns over regional banks looking more likely to result in a further …
Note: We’ll be discussing the economic and market risks around the upcoming Turkish presidential and parliamentary elections on at 09:00 EDT/14:00 BST on 10 th May . Register now. Turkey’s election race heats up Opinion polls are now painting a clearer …
Hard data released this week paint a more downbeat picture of the euro-zone economy than the latest surveys. Three points are worth highlighting. First, the data confirm that the 0.1% q/q rise in euro-zone GDP in Q1 masks a greater weakness in domestic …
Although underlying activity growth rebounded in the first quarter, while wage and price inflation remained too high, we expect the second quarter to bring a sharper slowdown across the board. GDP data show weaker start to year The first-quarter GDP …
28th April 2023
The Bank of Canada’s Summary of Deliberations suggests it was closer to resuming interest rate hikes in April than we thought. Nonetheless, as the data releases this week showed a fall in the job vacancy rate and point to a contraction in March GDP, it …
The South African Reserve Bank’s Monetary Policy Review (MPR), published this week, made it clear that the central bank is increasingly incorporating fiscal risks into its interest rate projections and decision making process. The poor state of the public …
Panic stations in Argentina Developments in Argentina have taken a(nother) turn for the worse over the past couple of weeks. March’s grim inflation print (of 104% y/y) alongside rumours of an imminent devaluation and plans to renegotiate the country’s IMF …
The Bank of England’s Chief Economist, Huw Pill, has come under fire this week after saying that everyone in the UK “needs to accept that they’re worse off and stop trying to maintain their real spending power by bidding up prices whether through higher …
Credit Suisse’s Q1 results, released this week, revealed the scale of the crisis that led to its demise. The two key pieces of data we learnt were that the bank saw deposit outflows of CHF67bn in the quarter and that, at its peak, it borrowed CHF168bn …
RBNZ to relax lending rules On Wednesday, the RBNZ unveiled its proposal to ease Loan-to-Value Ratio (LVR) restrictions on mortgage lending by banks. With house prices now 18% below their January 2022 peak, the RBNZ has judged that threats to financial …