Selangor Journal
Bank Negara Malaysia as seen in Kuala Lumpur on May 12, 2023. — Picture by REUTERS

BNM to hold rates at 3 pct through end-2024 — Reuters poll

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 5 — Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) will hold its key policy rate at 3 per cent on Thursday, adopting the same no-change stance as most of its Asian peers amid signs of moderating economic growth and cooling inflation, showed a Reuters poll of economists.

Inflation in Malaysia dropped to a two-year low of 2 per cent in July and the central bank, which does not particularly target inflation in setting monetary policy, said it would cool further.

That suggests BNM, having raised rates by a modest 125 basis points in the current cycle, has concluded its tightening but will keep rates higher for longer as the weak ringgit, down over 5 per cent this year, may prevent inflation from falling quickly.

All 27 economists in the August 29-September 4 Reuters poll forecast the central bank would keep its benchmark overnight policy rate unchanged at 3 per cent at its Thursday meeting, while medians showed it there through 2024.

“BNM has limited reasons to change its policy stance for its upcoming meeting … inflationary pressures are easing, keeping the hawkish bias in check. BNM’s focus will remain on financial stability and external risks,” said Lavanya Venkateswaran, senior Asean economist at OCBC Bank.

“BNM’s ‘slightly accommodative’ policy stance remains supportive of slowing growth hence there is no imminent need to ease policy. Moreover, BNM’s rate hiking cycle was less aggressive than regional peers, implying the room to par back rate hikes is lower.”

A strong majority, 24 of 25, forecast the central bank to hold rates at 3 per cent until year-end. Only one expects a 25 basis point hike to 3.25 per cent in November.

Some economists cautioned inflation could rise again once pandemic-era subsidies are lifted, suggesting the fight against price rises is not yet over.

However, slowing domestic economic growth, coupled with a sluggish global economy and a weaker China — Malaysia’s largest trade partner — would compel BNM to remain on hold for an extended period.

Among those who had a view on rates until the end of 2024, over 80 per cent of economists, 15 of 18, forecast the central bank would hold rates. Of the remaining three, one said rates would peak at 3.25 per cent, while two expected them to fall to 2.75 per cent.

That was despite its regional peers, who have also completed their monetary policy tightening cycles, being forecast to start easing in the first half of next year.

“Leading indicators still point towards subdued third quarter growth … the MPC (Monetary Policy Committee) will likely keep policy slightly accommodative with the rate maintained at 3 per cent. Our base case remains for an extended pause through 2024,” said Kit Wei Zheng, head of Asean economics at Citigroup.

“The MPC may choose to wait until there is greater clarity over the timing and magnitude of subsidy reform before deciding whether or not to hike.”

— Reuters

Top Picks

Liek Hou shines again with double gold medals in Spain

Senior leader under probe for suspected cronyism over supply projects

Sarawak Foundation to sponsor late Joanna’s children’s education — Abang Johari