Investi Stratix
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Forex
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Forex
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
No Result
View All Result
Investi Stratix
No Result
View All Result

Riding growth wave, most Asian central banks to go slower than Fed on rate cuts: Reuters poll

by
October 31, 2024
in Stock
0
Riding growth wave, most Asian central banks to go slower than Fed on rate cuts: Reuters poll

By Devayani Sathyan

BENGALURU (Reuters) – Most Asian central banks will cut interest rates slower than the U.S. Federal Reserve over the coming year, Reuters polls showed, as solid growth has eased pressure to maintain currency stability against a persistently strong dollar.

A jumbo 50 basis points Fed rate cut in September and expectations for two more quarter-percentage point reductions by end-year has provided wriggle room for central banks in Asian economies to consider their next moves.

The Fed is expected to cut rates by another 125 basis points next year, much more than Asian central banks. But with the U.S. economy showing continued resilience, the greater risk is for the Fed to move more gradually than speed up.

With inflation broadly within Asian central bank targets and growth still resilient, there is no urgency for most to be slashing rates much further.

“Despite easing inflation at home, weak currencies had deterred policymakers from prematurely lowering rates, to prevent further compression in rate differentials,” said Radhika Rao, senior economist at DBS in Singapore.

“Each of them is really moving on their own beat and they are not going to match the Fed’s moves one-on-one.”

Apart from the Indian rupee, which the Reserve Bank of India is actively managing to keep stable, as well as the Chinese yuan, most Asian currency losses this year range from 2-6% against the U.S. dollar.  

Excluding the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), seven of eight important Asian central banks which hiked rates only modestly after the pandemic compared to developed economy peers, will hold rates for the rest of 2024 or cut by 25 basis points at most, according Reuters polls taken Oct. 1-29.

Only Bank Indonesia was forecast to cut by another 50 basis points this year.

So far only the Bank of Korea, Bank of Thailand and Bank Indonesia have cut rates by 25 basis points while the Philippine central bank reduced them by 50 basis points. The State Bank of Vietnam reduced rates in June 2023 and has been on hold since. 

Next year, only the Philippine central bank was forecast to cut rates by 100 basis points while the rest were expected to hold or at most cut 50 basis points in total.

The PBOC is an outlier. It announced its most aggressive monetary easing measures since the pandemic in recent weeks to revive the economy, which grew 4.5% last quarter on a year earlier, lower than the 5% growth target. But it also changed its key benchmark interest rate.

For the bulk of world economies where rates are falling, the risk remains they go lower than economists currently expect, the survey found, underpinning a solid global outlook.

Much will depend on whether the Fed decides to move slower than currently expected.

“We believe the main risk to our interest rate outlook for Asian central banks is the path of the Federal Reserve…If the Fed chooses to be cautious with rate cuts, it will mean a stronger dollar,” said Alicia Herrero Garcia, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at Natixis. 

(Other stories from the October Reuters global economic poll)

(Polling by the Reuters Polls team in Bengaluru and bureaus in Beijing, Seoul, Bangkok, Manila, Jakarta, Taipei and Kuala Lumpur; Editing by Ross Finley, Hari Kishan and Ros Russell)

This post appeared first on investing.com
Previous Post

Starbucks misses Q4 expectations but new CEO’s plan ‘clear and aspirational’

Next Post

Analysis-Companies boost social and climate reporting amid ESG backlash

Next Post
Analysis-Companies boost social and climate reporting amid ESG backlash

Analysis-Companies boost social and climate reporting amid ESG backlash

Subscribe to InvestiStratix.com

    Popular News

    A new money order: Wall Street, tech titans embrace Stablecoins as regulation looms

    A new money order: Wall Street, tech titans embrace Stablecoins as regulation looms

    June 9, 2025
    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    June 9, 2025
    Trade war poses greater threat than COVID for emerging market central banks: IMF

    Trade war poses greater threat than COVID for emerging market central banks: IMF

    June 8, 2025
    RBI turns neutral after sharp rate cut; ING expects another easing later this year

    RBI turns neutral after sharp rate cut; ING expects another easing later this year

    June 8, 2025
    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    June 8, 2025

    Trending News

    A new money order: Wall Street, tech titans embrace Stablecoins as regulation looms

    A new money order: Wall Street, tech titans embrace Stablecoins as regulation looms

    June 9, 2025
    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave

    June 9, 2025

    Popular News

    • How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave
      June 9, 2025
    • How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A wave
      June 8, 2025

    About Us

    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 investistratix.com | All Rights Reserved

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Politics
    • Economy
    • Forex
    • Stock
    • Editor’s Pick

    Copyright © 2025 investistratix.com | All Rights Reserved