Business World

Singapore tightens in surprise move, sending currency higher

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THE MONETARY Authority of Singapore (MAS) announced in a surprise move Tuesday that it was further tightening monetary policy due to upside risks to its inflation forecasts, sending the currency to its highest level since October.

The central bank, which uses foreign exchange as its main policy tool, said it will “raise slightly the rate of appreciati­on” of the main currency band, while keeping its width and center unchanged. That means it’s allowing the currency to appreciate against its peers in the months ahead to counter imported cost pressures.

The MAS’s first unschedule­d action since 2015 and only the third since 2001 came ahead of its scheduled April meeting. It follows Monday’s release of the consumer price index, which hit an 8-year high and prompted the government to review inflation forecasts.

The tightening also precedes the Federal Reserve’s first meeting of the year, in which it’s likely to pave the way for interest-rate increases starting in March.

Central banks globally are beginning to rein in looser, accommodat­ive policies that helped their economies weather the pandemic as inflation risks mount from supply chain disruption­s, rising commoditie­s prices and fiscal stimulus.

The Singapore dollar traded 0.2% higher at 1.3437 the US dollar at 10:03 a.m. local time.

Singapore, which relies heavily on imports, had already taken steps toward tightening in October, when it unexpected­ly raised the appreciati­on path of its currency band.

The MAS noted Tuesday that inflation has shifted higher since that decision, and that “pandemic-related and geopolitic­al shocks” pose risks for further increases. It raised its inflation forecasts for 2022, projecting core prices to rise 2% to 3%, from 1% to 2% expected in October. —

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