Filtered by Topic: Monetary Policy Use setting Monetary Policy
The February employment report and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony to Congress next week should give a clearer indication of whether recent talk of interest rates going “higher for longer” is justified. Longer, but not necessarily higher? Market rate …
3rd March 2023
Another inflation surprise… The focus this week was on yet another higher-than-expected inflation print. The headline inflation rate edged down in February, but only to 8.5%, whereas a much bigger fall had been anticipated. And the core measure rose …
RBA’s hawkishness suggests rates will rise for a few more months However, softer incoming data suggest that the peak in rates isn’t far off Looming slowdown in activity and inflation opens door for rate cuts before year-end The RBA adopted a more …
1st March 2023
Argentina-IMF relations set for a rockier phase Argentine officials headed to Washington this week to discuss the fourth review of the country’s IMF deal. The good news is that Argentina is likely to have met last year’s performance criteria, which …
24th February 2023
The People’s Bank last cut policy rates in August. Worries about currency weakness then stayed its hand – plus a view that supply-side disruption linked to COVID would render further easing ineffective. Those concerns have since gone away. We had thought …
The more hawkish tone in financial markets this week is justified. Prior to this week, investors seemed to be optimistic that the previous increases in interest rates would be enough to bring inflation back down to the Bank of England’s 2.0% target, and …
As we noted here , the Riksbank has made a big policy shift in the few weeks since Erik Thedéen took over as Governor. The most concrete changes were to raise its forecast for policy rates and announce the start of outright asset sales, but the Bank has …
MPC minutes highlight divergence of views The MPC minutes of the RBI’s policy meeting from earlier this month – in which the pace of tightening slowed to a 25bp hike , taking the repo rate to 6.50% – confirm that there are significant differences of …
Fight over yield ceiling resumes Yield Curve Control (YCC) remains on borrowed time. The 10-year Japanese government bond (JGB) yield has consistently closed above the 0.5% ceiling since Monday last week and this week the Bank has once again had to step …
Governor Tiff Macklem reiterated this week that the Bank of Canada wants time to assess the impact of high interest rates, suggesting it will not respond to the strength of employment by immediately resuming interest rate hikes. The weakness of home …
17th February 2023
In a previous edition of the UK Economics Weekly we said that the CPI core services inflation and private sector pay figures released this week would prove pivotal in determining whether the Bank of England raises interest rates further or calls time on …
Food price inflation may be overstated The consumer price data for January released this week proved something of a nasty surprise , with the headline rate jumping unexpectedly sharply to 6.5% y/y, pushing it above the ceiling of the RBI’s 2-6% target …
The surge in employment and rise in hours worked in January suggest that economic activity continued to expand at the start of 2023 and present clear upside risks to our forecasts for GDP growth. Nevertheless, we disagree with the market-implied view …
10th February 2023
Core inflation worries prompt hawkish response This week’s central bank communications suggest that worries about strong underlying price pressures are putting policymakers in a more hawkish mood than we had anticipated. Admittedly, Peru is something of …
Markets have continued to swing round to the Fed’s view that rate cuts are unlikely this year. We still believe that those cuts are coming, however, as economic growth disappoints and core inflation falls more rapidly than the Fed is expecting. Markets …
Philippines is the outlier In most of the region inflationary pressures are continuing to ease and central banks are preparing to bring tightening cycles to an end. (See here .) A key exception is the Philippines, where a jump in headline inflation to a …
Further thoughts on Turkey’s earthquake disaster The earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria this week, killing more than 21,000 people, is a human tragedy and our thoughts are with everyone affected. It’s still too early to fully assess the macroeconomic …
First impressions are important because of the primacy effect which means they are, apparently, stored more easily in the long-term memory. That may be why Erik Thedéen used his first meeting as Riksbank Governor to spring a hawkish surprise this week, …
Hawks singing the same tune At February’s ECB meeting, policymakers were unwilling to commit to raising interest rates further beyond the promised 50bp hike in March. But their comments this week show a clear intention to do so. Table 1 summarises some …
The main development of the week happened in the past few hours: the reported nomination of Kazuo Ueda as the next BoJ Governor. Our initial response is here . While analysts and investors are looking for clarity on Mr Ueda’s views, there is little to …
RBI still cautious on inflation Though the RBI slowed the pace of tightening with a 25bp hike to the repo rate (to 6.50%) this week, the tone of the communications was more hawkish than we had anticipated. The slight rise in the 10-year bond yield …
With trimmed mean inflation surpassing the Bank’s November forecast in Q4, the RBA turned more hawkish when it lifted the cash rate by 25bp on Tuesday. Today’s Statement on Monetary Policy shows that the Bank expects inflation to only touch the top end of …
The strength of the early January data appears to rule out the possibility of an imminent recession, but that won’t prevent inflation from continuing to fall sharply from here. Jobs report appears to justify Fed’s caution Fed officials seem to agree …
3rd February 2023
Survey data point to weak start to 2023 Data published this week provided the first signs of how the region’s economies fared at the start of this year. And it’s not good news. In Brazil, the FGV confidence indicators all dropped back in January, with …
While the Bank of England raised interest rates by a further 50 basis points (bps) yesterday, from 3.50% to 4.00%, it hinted that if Bank Rate is not already at a peak, it is very close to one. As we unpacked in our “Drop-In” webinar on this week’s policy …
Weak start to the year in Korea Recent economic data from Korea paint a depressing picture. GDP figures published late last month showed the economy contracted by 0.4% q/q at the end of 2022 – the third worst quarterly performance since the Asian …
With the dust now settled after yesterday’s ECB meeting, it is clear investors have stuck with their dovish interpretation of the decision. They now expect the deposit rate to peak at around 3.4%, rather than 3.6%. (See Chart 1.) Meanwhile, 10-year …
As we argued in our latest Riksbank Watch , the fact that Sweden’s inflation rate rose more than expected in November and December is a key reason why we expect policymakers to raise rates by 50bp next week. But looking further ahead, we are …
This week’s Australian CPI data delivered an unwelcome surprise for the RBA. The headline rate rose from 7.3% to 7.8% in Q4, compared with an analyst consensus of 7.5%. While that was lower than the RBA had been expecting back in November (8.0%), the …
27th January 2023
Governor Tiff Macklem stressed on Wednesday that the pause in the Bank of Canada’s tightening cycle is conditional on looser conditions in the labour market and a fall in inflation expectations. The CFIB Business Barometer showed evidence of both a day …
Turkish policymakers deepen de-dollarisation Turkish policymakers deepened their “lira-isation” drive this week by increasing the incentive for firms to convert their FX into lira, but we’re not convinced that the policy changes will be successful and …
The recent persistence of inflation leads us to think that the Bank of England will proceed with another 50 basis point (bps) rise in Bank Rate, from 3.50% now to 4.00% next Thursday. (See here .) We will be discussing the policy outlooks for the BoE, the …
Central bankers let their hair down Climate change was front and centre of the discussions earlier this month when a host of heavy-hitters from the world of central banking descended on Stockholm for an International Symposium on Central Bank …
26th January 2023
Nigeria’s loan-to-bond swap up in the air Plans by the government of Nigeria to swap central bank loans to bonds have hit a sticky patch, making it unclear whether the country can reap the associated economic gains. Parliamentarians in Nigeria have …
20th January 2023
The CPI-trim and CPI-median measures of core inflation will be revised up next month but that does not change our view that they will fall sharply over the first half of this year. We think the 25 bp hike from the Bank of Canada next week will mark the …
Rebounding won An easing of inflation pressures in the US along with China’s reopening have provided a boost to Asian currencies over the past couple of months. The biggest rebound has been in the Korean won, which has now appreciated by 17% against the …
CPI inflation is falling and the Bank of England Governor, Andrew Bailey, sounded optimistic this week when he said that “a corner had been turned on inflation”. But he and most other Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members will probably still be …
The Swiss franc is not immune to the shifting global landscape and we now suspect that it will be broadly stable against the euro in the coming months rather than appreciating. Looking back, the franc has been through three distinct phases since the …
10-year JGB yield retreats from ceiling Following the Bank of Japan’s decision on Wednesday to keep its short-term policy rate and Yield Curve Control (YCC) settings unchanged, 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields fell to as low as 0.37% that …
The December CPI data and the Bank of Canada’s quarterly business and consumer surveys, released next week, could have a big bearing on the policy outlook. For the Bank to pause after one final 25 bp hike this month, as we assume, it will need to see …
13th January 2023
Brazil riots: reflecting on the fallout The riots in Brasília last Sunday thankfully ended quickly. And the country’s financial markets, after losing ground on Monday, have rebounded over the course of this week. Investors have been buoyed by the fact …
At a key policy conference, South Africa’s ruling party officials offered little by way of new ideas to address the country’s mounting economic challenges. And some fresh proposals risk making matters worse. The ruling African National Congress (ANC) …
Higher Swedish GDP forecast We learnt this week that Sweden’s monthly GDP Indicator declined by 0.5% m/m in November as a result of a fall in manufacturing output and “several service producing industries”, suggesting that policy tightening was …
Services inflation on the rise The timely Tokyo CPI showed that inflation jumped from 3.7% to 4.0% in December, twice the BoJ’s 2% target. Our measure of “core” goods inflation accelerated further, but below the surface there are clear signs of a …
Inflation strong, consumption resilient On balance, the economic data released this week are consistent with our view that the RBA has more work to do. For a start, inflation rose back up from 6.9% to 7.3% in November, with trimmed mean inflation reaching …
Has the EGP gone too far once again? The Egyptian pound has pared back its losses after sharp falls against the dollar on Wednesday in a sign that, just like 2016, the currency may have overshot. The authorities may keep the pound weak in a bid to rebuild …
12th January 2023
The resilience of the labour market is a risk to our view that the Bank of Canada will pause its tightening cycle after a final 25 bp hike this month, even as the slump in natural gas prices raises the chance that CPI inflation will fall faster than the …
6th January 2023
Sub-Saharan Africa’s grim year ahead Last year ended with the bang of Ghana’s sovereign default , and 2023 has started with economies bracing for disruptions due to the end of zero-COVID in China and a looming global recession. While these are likely to …
The past few weeks have brought the news that the UK economy is lagging even further behind its G7 counterparts. (See here .) One reason for this relative underperformance is real business investment, which accounts for 9.5% of real GDP and in Q3 was …
A year to write home about 2022 was in many ways a memorable year for Latin America. With Argentina’s World Cup victory the trophy returned to Latin America for the first time in 20 years. And it’s been a good year off the pitch too. GDP growth has …
23rd December 2022