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Markets

Philippine central bank to hold rates despite inflation pressures

  • While the BSP has dismissed the inflation uptick as "transitory", some economists have ruled out further policy easing this year and have raised the possibility of a rate hike.
Published February 10, 2021

MANILA: The Philippine central bank is expected to keep its benchmark interest rate steady at a record low on Thursday, shrugging off a projected uptick in inflation to support the country's pandemic-hit economy, a Reuters poll showed.

All 13 economists surveyed in the poll predicted the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) will leave the rate on its overnight reverse repurchase facility unchanged at 2.0% for a second straight meeting.

"We do not see the BSP deviating from its accommodative monetary policy stance, that is, not prematurely hiking policy rate on the back of elevated headline inflation," said Kanika Bhatnagar, an economist at ANZ.

Inflation, which had been picking up since the last quarter of 2020, hit a two-year high of 4.2% in January, as supply constraints boosted the price of meat and vegetables.

While the BSP has dismissed the inflation uptick as "transitory", some economists have ruled out further policy easing this year and have raised the possibility of a rate hike.

The BSP slashed rates by a cumulative 200 basis points last year, at a time when the economy suffered the worst contraction on record due to the pandemic.

If economic indicators do not show an improvement and government spending remains lacklustre in the first quarter, Bhatnagar said the BSP will likely take up the slack with another rate cut of 25 basis points at its March meeting.

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