Bangkok Post

BSP raises its rates again to tame inflation

-

MANILA: The Philippine central bank yesterday raised interest rates for the second time in six weeks and said it was ready to take further action to tame inflation and volatility in the peso.

The Philippine­s, like other Asian economies that have external deficits, faces pressure to follow the US Federal Reserve in shifting away from low interest rate settings or risk capital flight as investors seek higher yielding assets.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ Monetary Board hiked the overnight borrowing rate 25 basis points to 3.5%, following up on a rate increase in May which was the first in more than three years.

The BSP is the second central bank in the region to deliver two hikes in back-to-back meetings — Bank Indonesia (BI) raised rates twice in May.

The decision was a close call with only seven of 12 analysts in a Reuters poll predicting a hike. The rest had expected rates to be kept on hold.

“The BSP is prepared to take further policy action as needed to achieve its price and financial stability objectives,” the central bank said in a statement.

Governor Nestor Espenilla said the decision to raise rates was to keep inflation expectatio­ns from spiking and risking an upward spiral in consumer prices, which rose to their highest in five years in May.

“Inflation expectatio­ns remained elevated for 2018 and the risk of possible second-round effects from ongoing price pressures argued for follow-through monetary policy action,” he told a news conference.

The BSP revised downwards its average inflation forecast for this year to 4.5% from an earlier estimate of 4.6%. It also lowered its average inflation projection for next year to 3.3% from 3.4%.

With inflation projected to ease and return to within the bank’s 2-4% target in 2019, Espenilla signalled there was no urgent need for further rate hikes.

Deputy governor Diwa Guinigundo said inflation would likely peak in the third quarter, leading some analysts to believe rates would be kept on hold for the rest of the year.

“The BSP struck a neutral tone following today’s hike,” said Noelan Arbis economist at HSBC. “As such, we don’t expect any additional rate hikes for this year should inflationa­ry pressures continue to ease.”

Others felt BSP’s readiness to take further action meant the door to another hike was open.

“We therefore maintain our forecast that BSP will follow up with another 25 basis point policy rate hike at its next meeting in August, taking the policy rate to 3.75% this year,” Nomura said in a research note.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand