Business World

Standard Chartered sees BSP hiking rates by 25bps this week

- By Melissa Luz T. Lopez Senior Reporter

THE CENTRAL BANK may find room to raise rates by just 25 basis points (bp) this week, a bank analyst said, provided it comes with a hawkish statement from policy makers in order to temper further price pressures.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) will reassess monetary conditions on Thursday and decide on benchmark rates. A BusinessWo­rld poll among economists saw seven betting on a 25-bp hike, while six are expecting the Monetary Board to turn aggressive and announce a 50-bp increase.

Several analysts expect a 50bp rate hike as the realizatio­n of BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla, Jr.’s hints of a “strong policy response” as inflation surged to a nine-year high in June at 5.2%, with signs that prices spikes are becoming more widespread.

For his part, Standard Chartered Bank economist Chidu Narayanan said there is scope for a third 25-bp rate increase this week, which will match the BSP’s moves in May and June.

“BSP has stated its concern about inflation expectatio­ns, but a hawkish rhetoric is sufficient to reduce expectatio­ns, even with only a 25 bps rate hike,” Mr. Narayanan said via e-mail.

Benchmark rates currently range between 3-4%. The last time the BSP raised rates by 50 bps in one go was in July 2008, when inflation surged to a 17-year high at 12.2% against a 3-5% target that year.

Still, Mr. Narayanan did not dismiss a 50-bp rate adjustment for the upcoming meeting and said it could be “close call” on Thursday afternoon.

“Inflation is high and likely to remain so, supporting the case for a 50 bps hike (as the market is expecting),” the bank analyst said. “However, BSP is not worried about inflation, which it expects to fall to an average of 3.3% yearon-year in 2019 this would make a 50 bps rate hike disingenuo­us.”

The final print for July inflation — which will be announced by the Philippine Statistics Authority today — will play a huge part in the BSP’s decision. Mr. Narayanan expects prices to have climbed faster at 5.6% last month, hitting a fresh high and remaining beyond the central bank’s 2-4% target.

“Accelerati­ng inflation will likely prompt a hawkish rate hike from the central bank at its 9 August meeting; this would be the third straight hike,” the economist said, noting that the pace will quicken further this month before eventually easing back to target.

“Medium-term risks to inflation lie to the upside, in our view, on higher oil prices, a weaker currency or higher-than-expected infrastruc­ture investment.”

On the other hand, Mr. Narayanan said the Philippine economy likely grew by 6.7% during the second quarter, which if realized will soften from the 6.8% pace clocked in during the first three months of the year.

A surge in infrastruc­ture investment­s, coupled with robust household spending and strong factory output growth likely sustained the “strong, broad-based” domestic expansion, although short of the government’s 7-8% growth goal.

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