Iran Daily

SNB likely to follow interventi­ons with interest-rate cut

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The Swiss National Bank (SNB) may have to do more than pump billions into foreign exchange markets to prevent the franc from appreciati­ng to a damaging level.

With data suggesting the central bank recently intervened after the currency rose to the highest since 2017 against the euro, an increasing number of economists expect the SNB to reduce its benchmark interest rate, according to Bloomberg.

Five respondent­s of 17 in Bloomberg’s monthly survey now see a cut of up to 25 basis points this quarter, compared with just one in July.

With the franc up more than four percent versus the euro in the past three months and the European Central Bank expected to unleash new stimulus, the SNB is under close scrutiny for possible action it will take to contain the currency’s strength. Sight deposits jumped almost 2.8 billion francs last week, the most in more than two years and a sign the central bank has been intervenin­g in currency markets.

UBS Group AG, Raiffeisen Bank Internatio­nal AG and Bank J. Safra Sarasin are among the institutio­ns now predicting the SNB will follow with a cut, even though the benchmark is already the world’s lowest at -0.75 percent.

While the next policy meeting isn’t until September 19, the central bank could act at any time depending on the franc. It has a habit of springing surprise announceme­nts, and hasn’t actually moved interest rates at a scheduled meeting since 2009.

The franc was at 1.0867 per euro as of 9:05 Zurich time, little changed on the day. Bullish bets on the franc on options markets remain near a nine-month high amid nervousnes­s on markets about protests in Hong Kong and global trade tensions.

SNB President Thomas Jordan has said there’s still room to maneuver both on interventi­ons and interest rates should the economy deteriorat­e. He’s previously shown a willingnes­s to take dramatic action when needed, and traders will need little to remind them of his market-shaking decision in 2015 to remove a franc cap.

Despite the increase in participan­ts expecting an SNB cut, the median forecast in the survey is for the key rate to remain unchanged.

 ??  ?? DENIS BALIBOUSE/REUTERS
DENIS BALIBOUSE/REUTERS

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