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Fed's Longer Pause Opens Door for Asian Central Banks to Cut

Published 21/03/2019, 07:21 pm
Updated 21/03/2019, 09:29 pm
© Bloomberg. (EDITORS NOTE: Image was created using a variable planed lens.) The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building stands in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, Nov. 18, 2016. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen told lawmakers on Thursday that she intends to stay in the job until her term expires in January 2018 while extolling the virtues of the Fed's independence from political interference.

(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve’s abrupt policy shift has opened the door for interest rate cuts across Asia as inflation remains subdued and economic growth slows.

That’s a stark contrast from as recently as four months ago when the prospect of further Fed hikes was pummeling the region’s currencies and pressuring current account deficits.

Now, the focus across the region is shifting to domestic concerns as the primary driver of monetary policy. Central banks in Indonesia and the Philippines -- among the most aggressive rate hikers last year -- kept policy on hold on Thursday, as expected, citing subdued inflation pressures.

"The Fed’s big shift will end the tightening wave for Asia’s central banks and open the door for future easing," said Hak Bin Chua, an economist at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore.

A currency rally is also helping. China’s yuan has led gains among emerging-Asian currencies this year, strengthening almost 3 percent against the dollar and followed by the baht. That’s a turn from 2018, where only the Thai currency rose.

Policy Moves

Bank Indonesia kept its key rate unchanged at 6 percent on Thursday, with Governor Perry Warjiyo turning to macro-prudential measures to spur domestic demand and growth. Investment banks including Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE:GS) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) predict rate cuts beginning as early as the second quarter of the year.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas also kept its benchmark rate unchanged at 4.75 percent, with newly appointed Governor Benjamin Diokno saying prevailing monetary policy settings are appropriate. He has previously signaled a willingness to ease policy after 175 basis points of hikes in 2018.

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Taiwan’s central bank also meets and is expected to maintain the benchmark rate at 1.375 percent.

While China’s economy is forecast to stabilize around mid year, the rest of the region continues to feel its downdraft. South Korea’s exports -- a bellwether for global trade -- fell 4.9 percent from a year earlier during the first 20 days of the month, data Thursday showed.

"With a dovish Fed, Asian central banks can now lower real rates," said Trinh Nguyen, senior economist at Natixis Asia Ltd.

The Fed’s decision will also play out in developed economies, with central banks in the U.K., Norway and Switzerland all meeting later Thursday. While rising oil prices are expected to spur a hike in Norway, both the Swiss National Bank and Bank of England are forecast to remain on hold.

(Updates with Indonesia and Philippines rate decisions.)

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