Manila Bulletin

BSP raises key rate by 25 bps

To temper inflation buildup

- By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said Thursday, May 19, that it raising its key policy rate by 25 basis points (bps) on Friday to help temper the buildup of inflation expectatio­ns and in response to the strong rebound in the first quarter growth.

The new BSP policy rate is 2.25 percent, effective on May 20. The last time the BSP’s Monetary Board raised the benchmark rate was Nov. 15, 2018, also by 25 bps. In 2018, the Monetary Board increased the policy rates by a cumulative 175 bps. Meantime in 2020, the first year of the global pandemic, the BSP had a series of policy rate cuts, totaling 200 bps, and it also reduced the reserve requiremen­t ratio by 200 bps for big banks and 100 bps for small banks.

The BSP’s key rate or the overnight reverse repurchase facility – frozen at two percent since November 2020 – was adjusted higher to address the elevated risks to the inflation outlook which are now skewed towards the upside for the both 2022 and 2023.

The Monetary Board also decided to raise the interest rate on the BSP’s overnight deposit and lending facilities by 25 bps to 1.75 percent and 2.75 percent, respective­ly.

BSP officials led by Governor Benjamin E. Diokno also announced Thursday a higher inflation forecast for 2022 of 4.6 percent from its earlier March 24 estimate of 4.3 percent, and 3.9 percent for 2023, also up from the previous forecast of 3.6 percent. Both projection­s exceed the BSP inflation target of two percent to four percent for the next two years.

Diokno said the BSP has clearer reasons to roll back its pandemic-induced interventi­ons which includes holding off any rate adjustment­s for the last 18 months, after the government released a betterthan-expected 8.3 percent GDP growth in the first quarter.

The BSP chief expressed his confidence that the economy will achieve its seven percent to nine percent growth target for 2022, and expects a higher second quarter GDP numbers.

However when asked if the 25 bps rate hike will have any impact on growth, Diokno said the impact will be “very little” which likely implies that the BSP will not stop at a 25 bps rate adjustment for this year. Market analysts expect the Monetary Board to hike rates by at least 50 bps to 75 bps in the next months, following other central banks’ move and with the faster-than-expected growth.

Diokno said the strong rebound gives them scope to start its exit strategy from monetary accommodat­ion, beginning with the policy rate hike, the return to normal operations, enhancemen­ts to the interest rate corridor system and the unwinding of liquidity provisions and other regulatory relief measures.

“Moreover, given ample liquidity, a gradual recovery in credit activity, and stable financial market conditions, the Monetary Board has decided to reconfigur­e the BSP’s government securities (GS) purchasing window from a crisis interventi­on measure into a regular liquidity facility under our interest rate corridor framework. As part of the BSP’s standard monetary operations toolkit for injecting liquidity into the financial market, the recalibrat­ed GS purchasing window will enhance the BSP’s ability to manage domestic liquidity conditions and ensure the sustainabi­lity of its balance sheet,” said Diokno.

Meantime, in raising the interest rate, the Monetary Board took into main consid

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BENJAMIN E. DIOKNO

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