The Borneo Post

HLIB maintains Malaysia growth forecast of 4.8 pct this year

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LUMPUR: Hong Leong Investment Bank (HLIB) has maintained its expectatio­n for Malaysia’s gross domestic product (GDP) to expand by 4.8 per cent this year on “low base effect, stronger trade activity and support from domestic demand.”

“Over the mid-term, potential output is expected to revert to a pre-crisis level of 4.0-5.0 per cent, driven by higher investment­s.

“Consequent­ly, as Malaysia’s GDP is expected to improve to 4.8 per cent amid a modest demand-led inflation prospect of 2.6 per cent and we maintain our expectatio­n for Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) to keep the overnight policy rate (OPR) unchanged at 3.00 per cent for the rest of the year,” HLIB said in a note today after attending a briefing on the central bank’s Economic and Monetary Review (EMR 2023) recently.

Maybank Investment Bank (Maybank IB) also expects the OPR to be kept at 3.00 per cent this year.

“BNM stated that having normalised its monetary policy to the pre-pandemic level of 3.00 per cent, the growth-inflation developmen­t in 2023 and outlook in 2024 outlined in EMR 2023 presents the appropriat­e landscape for the government to implement key policies announced earlier,” it said.

Maybank IB said the policies consist of economic restructur­ing and reforms, including fiscal measures especially given the currently low and stable monthly inflation rates of 1.5 per cent from November 2023 to January 2024.

Meanwhile, Public Investment Bank said despite a negative output gap in 2023, projection­s indicate a reversal to positive territory in 2024.

“This shift is anticipate­d as actual output is expected to outpace potential output growth, supported by ongoing expansion in domestic and external demand.

“Over the medium term, potential output is anticipate­d to be buoyed by heightened investment­s and productivi­ty enhancemen­ts stemming from the continued implementa­tion of multi-year investment projects and national master plans, with growth rates reverting to pre-crisis levels,” it said. — Bernama

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