Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

C.bank seen keeping rates on hold ahead of elections

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„CB seen keeping rates unchanged ahead of Nov. 16 elections „Rate cut in May and August yet to boost credit „Economic growth may be near 2-decade low this year „Policy decision due tomorrow

Sri Lanka’s Central Bank will likely leave its key interest rates on hold at a policy review tomorrow, after a 50-basis-point cut in August, a Reuters poll showed, ahead of presidenti­al elections and as lower bank rates go into effect.

Central Bank chief Indrajit Coomaraswa­my told Reuters after the last policy rate decision that it “is extremely unlikely to reduce” the key monetary policy rates before the presidenti­al elections to be held on November 16.

All 13 economists surveyed by Reuters expected the Central Bank of Sri Lanka to keep both its standing deposit facility rate (SDFR) and standing lending facility rate (SLFR) steady at 7.00 percent and 8.00 percent, respective­ly.

All predicted the statutory reserve ratio (SRR) would also be kept at 5.00 percent.

The Central Bank has loosened policy in several steps to boost sluggish growth after tourism and investment­s plummeted in Sri Lanka following deadly Easter Day bomb attacks by Islamist militants

The Central Bank cut rates by 100 bps in two meetings since May, reduced the SRR by 250 bps, releasing around Rs.150 billion of liquidity to the financial market. It also imposed caps on rupee deposit interest rates that enabled banks to reduce the cost of mobilising funds from the general public.

As a result, the commercial banks’ average weighted prime lending rate (AWPR) has fallen 136 basis points as of October 2.

The Monetary Board last month ordered banks to reduce interest rates on all rupee denominate­d loans by at least 200 basis points by October 15, from levels in April.

“Since the Central Bank’s objective of reducing market lending rates are expected to take effect with lending rate caps, another rate cut is unwarrante­d,” said Softlogic Capital Markets CEO Danushka Samarasing­he.

The rate cuts have already put pressure on the rupee currency, which has fallen 2.2 percent amid foreign outflows from government securities.

The attacks on luxury hotels and churches on April 21 killed more than 250 people and private sector credit growth remains sluggish.

The island nation’s economic growth eased to a 17-year low of 3.2 percent in 2018 and the IMF expects the pace to slow to 2.7 percent this year. A Reuters poll has predicted 2019 growth will be the lowest in nearly two decades.

The government’s finances, meanwhile, remain under pressure with a heavy external debt repayment schedule between 2019 and 2022.

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