The Jerusalem Post

Minutes notes show: BoI voted 4-1 to hold rates, citing war uncertaint­y

- • By STEVEN SCHEER

Four of the five members of the Bank of Israel’s monetary policy committee voted on February 26 to leave the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4.5%, meeting minutes showed on Monday, citing uncertaint­y over the trajectory of the war.

One policymake­r voted to lower the key rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.25%.

In January, the central bank lowered the rate by a quarter-point from 4.75%, cutting it for first time in nearly four years.

Prior to the rate cut, policymake­rs had held rates steady for four straight decisions, following 10 straight rate increases that had taken the policy rate up from 0.1% in April of 2022.

It noted that economic activity indicators showed a gradual improvemen­t in activity, after a notable contractio­n in business activity with the eruption of the war on October 7, while market volatility had moderated and financial markets were operating properly.

Still, “the level of uncertaint­y regarding the expected scope and duration of the fighting is very high, and this impacts as well on the extent of the adverse impact on activity,” the minutes said.

Israel and Hezbollah have been trading fire since the Hamas attack on Israel, fueling concern about the danger of all-out war between the adversarie­s. The central bank had said in January that its rate cut cycle would be slow to maintain financial stability, even as inflation continues to ease – reaching a 2.6% rate in January.

“In view of the war, the monetary committee’s policy is focusing on stabilizin­g the markets and reducing uncertaint­y, alongside price stability and supporting economic activity,” it said.

Despite the war and a credit rating downgrade by Moody’s, the shekel is stable and near its strongest level of 2024.

But policymake­rs remained wary, pointing to a still high risk premium for Israel as measured by credit default swaps and a wide spread between Israel’s dollar-denominate­d government bonds and US government bonds.

Since the rates decision, Israel sold a record high $8 billion of dollar-denominate­d bonds in robust demand.

The war has dented Israel’s economy, contractin­g by nearly an annualized 21% in the fourth quarter from the prior three months. Growth was 2% in all of 2023. (Reuters)

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