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S’pore central bank set to join policy easing tide

First easing in over three years as global slowdown weighs on economy

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SINGAPORE: Singapore’s central bank will probably ease monetary policy for the first time in more than three years as a global slowdown continues to weigh on the export-reliant economy.

A majority of the economists surveyed by Bloomberg predict the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will reduce the slope of its currency band by 50 basis points on Monday, implying a more gradual pace of appreciati­on in the local dollar. The MAS uses the exchange rate, rather than interest rates as its main policy tool.

Central banks around the world are loosening policy to guard against the global slowdown and escalating Us-china trade tensions. In Singapore, authoritie­s are taking a gradual approach, as they monitor risks and watch the job market closely.

“The global slowdown continues to weigh on the domestic sector, with significan­t implicatio­ns on the labour market,” Irvin Seah, senior economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd in Singapore, said in a research note. “A robust fiscal budget is expected early next year to render support for the economy while the MAS will most likely ease the monetary policy stance moderately.”

DBS analysts are among those seeing a 50-point reduction in the slope of the currency band on Monday.

The downturn may prompt a more aggressive move by the MAS, according to eight of 22 economists in the Bloomberg survey. They predict the central bank will move to a flat slope – meaning it won’t seek an appreciati­on in the exchange rate.

Bloomberg’s Asean economists Tamara Mast Henderson said: “Singapore’s economy faces the weakest growth prospects since the global financial crisis, whether or not a technical recession is averted in 3Q. That’s likely to spur the monetary authority to ease policy. We expect the slope to be lowered to zero.”

That action may prompt the Singapore dollar to weaken, according to analysts like Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank Ltd. The currency is down about 0.8% against the US dollar so far this year, having strengthen­ed yesterday by 0.1% to 1.3743 as of 1:45 pm local time. For now, it looks like the economy narrowly avoided a technical recession.after contractin­g an annualised 3.3% in the second quarter, the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists is for gross domestic product to expand 1.2% on a quarterly basis, and gain 0.2% from a year ago. The government will publish advanced GDP data on Monday.

Manufactur­ing remains the hardest-hit sector, while other parts of the economy are still relatively healthy and retrenchme­nts haven’t yet significan­tly increased. Industrial output plunged in August by the most in almost four years, with electronic­s posting its worst production since 2012.

The MAS left its policy settings unchanged in April after tightening twice in 2018. The central bank adjusts the slope, width, and centre of the currency band to adjust the pace of appreciati­on or depreciati­on of the exchange rate. Tinkering with the width or centre is a much rarer, and more aggressive, move.

Despite the United States and China re-igniting talks to find common ground toward a trade deal, Singapore is among economies across Asia having to prepare for the worst between their two biggest trading partners.

“Singapore, being an export-oriented economy and a price-taker, remains vulnerable to the ongoing Us-china trade tensions,” analysts from United Overseas Bank Ltd in Singapore said in a research note. “Singapore’s output gap has turned negative since the fourth quarter of 2018 and is at risk of remaining so for the rest of 2019.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Downtrend: A container vessel docking at the West Coast container port in Singapore. A plunge in exports and the worst growth rates for a decade have fuelled concerns about the outlook for Singapore’s economy, with analysts saying the figures offer a warning that Asia is heading for a slowdown as Us-china tensions bite.
— AFP Downtrend: A container vessel docking at the West Coast container port in Singapore. A plunge in exports and the worst growth rates for a decade have fuelled concerns about the outlook for Singapore’s economy, with analysts saying the figures offer a warning that Asia is heading for a slowdown as Us-china tensions bite.

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