Another interest rate hike predicted on July 21

14 July 2022 - 13:48 By Vuyani Ndaba
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The Reserve Bank has now hiked interest rates by a cumulative 125 basis points since November. File photo.
The Reserve Bank has now hiked interest rates by a cumulative 125 basis points since November. File photo.
Image: Supplied

The SA Reserve Bank will raise its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 5.25% next Thursday as it tries to rein in quicker inflation, a Reuters poll found.

In a July 7 to 13 poll, 19 of 23 economists expected a half-point hike to 5.25%, with the other four forecasting a larger three-quarters of one percent increase.

The poll found a median 65% probability of a 50 basis point rise and 35% chance of 75 basis points.

“We expect the SARB to hike by 50 basis points in July and September, before returning to 25 basis points increases afterwards,” said Johannes Khosa at Nedbank.

The poll also concluded the SARB would hike another 50 basis points again in September, with a pause until early 2023, when the Bank was expected to hike another 50 basis points by end-March. The Bank meets in January and March.

The Bank has now hiked interest rates by a cumulative 125 basis points since November. At its last meeting two months ago, it did so by 50 basis points for the first time since January 2016 to 4.75%.

Consumer inflation quickened by more than expected to 6.5% year on year in May, breaching the Bank’s target range for the first time since 2017.

Economists project inflation to average 7.5% this quarter, before moderating gradually to 4.5% in the last quarter of next year, ushering in an interest rate cut in November 2023.

Still, inflation was expected to average 6.5% this year — above the SARB’s 3-6% target.

Khosa added global food and energy prices remain elevated in line with supply-demand imbalances that have been worsened by the Russia-Ukraine war and, to some extent, the zero-Covid policy in China.

Globally, inflation is expected to remain elevated for most of 2022 in both advanced and emerging market economies.

US inflation rose to 9.1% in June, reinforcing expectations of steep interest rate increases, a bad omen for the rand as dollar bulls continue to gain momentum.

"[Local] price inflation will push higher in July and remain sticky at elevated levels in the months to follow. A hawkish US Fed and the recent bout of rand weakness imply that the SARB will be attentive to the risk of capital outflows,” said Jee-A van der Linde at Oxford Economics.

Though the inflation shock in SA has not been as severe in advanced economies, price pressures have continued to build, Van der Linde added.

The poll showed economic growth slowing to 2.2% across this year, but 0.2 percentage points higher than predicted last month. Chronic power cuts continue to threaten to push growth lower from last year’s technical bounce of 4.9%.

GDP grew 1.9% in the first quarter in quarter-on-quarter seasonally adjusted and non-annualised terms.

Reuters


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