The Manila Times

Espenilla: BSP policy not dependent on Fed

- BY MAYVELIN U. CARABALLO

LIKELY US Federal Reserve rate hikes do not mean the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas ( BSP) needs to follow suit, central bank Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said on Friday.

“Our monetary policy is independen­t of what Fed does,” Espenilla told reporters in response to the release of the minutes of the US central bank’s October 30-November 1 policy meeting. - tion outlook relative to our target,” he added.

While the federal funds rate was kept unchanged during the meeting, a December adjustment has become more likely as many policymake­rs signaled that an increase “was likely to be warranted in the near term”.

The Bangko Sentral — after lowering its reverse repurchase rate to 3 percent from 4 percent on May 16 last year in the runup to adopting an interest rate corridor system on June 3, 2016 — again kept the policy rate unchanged at its November 9, 2017 meeting.

Overnight deposit and lending rates have also been maintained at 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent, respective­ly, and the reserve requiremen­t ratio remains

at 20 percent.

Inflation forecasts for this year and 2018 were maintained during the November 9 meeting but the outlook for next year was raised given upside risks. Still, Espenilla said that future inflation was expected to stay within target.

higher due mainly to higher utility rates and fuel prices, latest forecasts continue to show within the government’s 3 percent plus or minus 1 percentage point target range for 20182019,” he said following the November meeting.

Given current conditions, Espenilla said that monetary authoritie­s were of the view that prevailing monetary policy settings remained appropriat­e.

Earlier this week, Maybank Group Chief Economist Suhaimi Ilias said the Bangko Sentral could order a total 50-basis point (bps) hike next year, starting with a 25-bps adjustment during the third quarter.

“For the Philippine­s … there is need to manage … domestic macroecono­mic issues, especially that the pressure of the peso has skewed to the situation that the current account has shifted from of inflation, which is actually moving on an upward trend,” Ilias said.

quarter of 2018, meanwhile, was forecast by Australia’s ANZ research last month.

Given the country’s current ac could weaken past P52 to the dollar next year unless the BSP raises interest rates.

“Domestic interest rates are not high enough to attract suf

“If BSP does not hike rates as we expected, then [the] PHP may weaken more than our forecast next year,” it warned.

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