The Freeman

BSP surprises with massive rate hike to choke off rapid inflation

MANILA— The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas hiked its key rate by massive 75 basis points (bps) at an emergency meeting on Thursday, in a bid to rein in rapid inflation and arrest the peso’s slump.

- (Philstar.

The jumbo rate increase was preceded by two rate hikes cumulative­ly worth 50 bps in May and June. The BSP’s policy rate now stands at 3.25%, back to March 2020 level and reversing all of the central bank’s pandemic-era rate cuts.

This is the BSP’s most forceful tightening since it formally adopted the interest rate corridor (IRC) system as a framework for conducting its monetary operations in 2016. Before this, the last aggressive action from the BSP was recorded in July 2008, when it jacked up rates by 50 bps.

At the same time, this is the BSP's first unschedule­d move since holding an off-cycle meeting on April 16, 2020 to cut rates and support the pandemic-hit economy. The Monetary Board was not supposed to meet until August 18 and the BSP had originally planned to lift rates by 50 bps when that day comes.

As it is, the BSP’s surprise decision came over a week after the release of data showing inflation sizzling to 6.1% in June, the hottest in more than three years and soaring past the government’s 2-4% target.

The move also came after last night’s data showed US inflation hit a new four-decade high of 9.1% in June, fueling bets that the US Federal Reserve may fire off a supersized rate hike of 100 bps at its meeting later this month.

Contrary to the Fed, which has delivered mega rate hikes amid criticisms that it acted too slow on US inflation, the BSP had initially taken a less aggressive stance and lifted rates by only 25-bps at its May and June meetings to gently slow the economy and cool inflation.

But analysts have said the dissonance between the BSP and Fed’s policies has been weighing on the peso, which has sunk to 17-year lows. A falling currency is only exacerbati­ng inflation in the Philippine­s by making imports more expensive at a time of rising global energy prices.

“It’s more than enough for now to calm the markets. Also it won't necessaril­y hurt the economy. We've lived and done well with much tighter policy settings for nearly a decade,” Jun Neri, lead economist at Bank of the Philippine Islands, said.

“I believe they have the flexibilit­y to hike again in their August 18 meeting,” Neri added.

But more importantl­y, BSP Governor Felipe Medalla explained that today’s surprise hike was meant to convince Filipinos and the market that the central bank is serious in fighting inflation. This is because if Filipinos anticipate that prices will remain elevated in the coming months and years — or, in the BSP’s words, if inflation expectatio­ns were “disanchore­d” — people might call for bigger wages. This, in turn, may force businesses to increase their selling prices from time to time to offset the costs of pay hikes, potentiall­y creating a dangerous cycle of rapid inflation that would be harder to control.

"By taking urgent action, the Monetary Board aims to anchor inflation expectatio­ns further and temper mounting risks to the inflation outlook. In particular, policy action is intended to help manage spillovers from other countries that could potentiall­y disanchor inflation expectatio­ns," Medalla said in a statement.

 ?? PHILSTAR.COM ?? BSP Governor Felipe Medalla explained that today’s surprise hike was meant to convince Filipinos and the market that the central bank is serious in fighting inflation.
PHILSTAR.COM BSP Governor Felipe Medalla explained that today’s surprise hike was meant to convince Filipinos and the market that the central bank is serious in fighting inflation.

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