Budrigantrade-2022 is year of fight against global inflation
Budrigantrade-2022 is year of fight against global inflation.
2022.12.11 09:40
Budrigantrade-2022 is year of fight against global inflation.
Budrigantrade.com – Despite the slowdown in their economies, the world’s largest central banks will conclude this week the most aggressive year for interest rate hikes in four decades.
The key rate will be increased by 50 basis points on Wednesday to a range of 4% to 4.5 percent, the highest level since 2007, and further increases will be announced in early 2023.
The European Central Bank and the Bank of England are likely to move half a point later that day. Additionally, increased borrowing costs are anticipated in Mexico, Switzerland, Norway, Taiwan, Colombia, and the Philippines.
The year ends in a very different way than it began. In January, the majority of policymakers acknowledged that they were mistaken in their prediction that the inflation surge in 2021 would soon subside, but they maintained their assumption that they could control prices through consistent policy restraint.
Instead, a number of metrics demonstrate how they were forced to squeeze hard by an acceleration of global inflation to around double digits:
More than 50 central banks have carried out once-rare 75 basis point increases, some joining the Fed in doing so repeatedly.
A Budrigantrade.com Economics gauge of global rates is projected to end the year at 6.1%, up from 3.2% in January. Although signs are mounting that inflation has peaked in most places, the big question now is what happens in 2023.
The worst-case scenario involves persistent inflation and the onset of recessions, resulting in a stagflationary nightmare for central banks. The best chance lies in consumer price growth slowing down sufficiently to allow policymakers to consider lowering interest rates to boost growth instead of raising rates.
Even though a lot of investors think there will be a change, Fed Chair Jerome Powell and ECB President Christine Lagarde, who will both speak this week, say they will continue to focus on tackling inflation even if it hurts hiring and demand.
FED
The target rate for overnight bank lending will continue to be raised in early 2023, even though the Fed is expected to begin slowing down the pace of monetary policy tightening this week with a half-point increase.
Over the course of 2022 – a year in which inflation reached a four-decade high and left policymakers scrambling – an additional 50 basis points would amount to 4.25 percentage points of interest rate increases.
The government will release the November consumer price index on Tuesday, giving Fed officials one more look at a crucial inflation metric before the end of their two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. When food and fuel are excluded, economists anticipate 0.3% increases in the overall and core measure. On a yearly premise, the two checks are seen directing.
ECB
After inflation in the euro area slowed for the first time in one and a half years last month, the ECB is likely to raise rates by 50 basis points. However, a third 75 basis point move cannot be completely ruled out, and some of the more hawkish rate setters have indicated that they would support such a move, given that consumer price growth remains at 10%.
New quarterly economic forecasts, which are likely to see a reduction in growth projections and an increase in inflation projections for 2023, will also have an impact on the decision made by the Governing Council.
In addition, it is anticipated that policymakers will settle on the primary pillars of their approach to paying off debt of nearly €5 trillion ($5.2 trillion). Economists anticipate that the actual process, known as quantitative tightening or QT, will begin in the first quarter of next year.
Bank of England
Most people think that the BOE will raise its benchmark lending rate by half a point to 3.5 percent, which would be the highest level since 2008. Policymakers led by Governor Andrew Bailey have pledged to take strong action to stop a wage-price spiral with inflation at a 41-year high of 11.1% and consumers increasingly anticipating higher prices in the coming years.
This month’s decision is more difficult than in previous months because of the worsening economic outlook. Households are currently experiencing the tightest cost-of-living squeeze on record as a result of the current recession, which is expected to last into 2024.
Energy costs are no less than multiple times higher than expected, and colder-than-typical weather conditions is striking the UK interestingly since the previous winter.
Swiss Bank
SNB policymakers will likely opt for a half-point move rather than repeating September’s excessive 75 basis point step because inflation in Switzerland is also soaring at 3%, which is less than a third of what it is in the surrounding euro area.
The strong franc, which was a problem for SNB President Thomas Jordan for a long time, is now helping the economy because it lets the Swiss avoid inflation from other countries. If necessary, the central bank will likely reiterate its willingness to intervene in currency markets.
Norges Bank
Inflation data from the previous month indicated a slowdown in both headline and underlying price growth. As a result, the central bank of Norway is planning to increase its key rate by 25 basis points. Because of those figures, there has been less speculation about larger increases in borrowing costs, and some analysts are now more convinced that the hike in December will be the last in the cycle.
Even though Norges Bank’s most recent estimates from September indicate a peak rate of 3% over the course of the winter and project an additional quarter point hike early next year, this viewpoint is supported by other recent data releases that highlight the gloomiest economic outlook since the financial crisis.
Mexican and Colombian Bank
This week, Mexico’s and Colombia’s central banks close out an unprecedented year for Latin American monetary policy.
Latin America’s big five inflation-targeting central banks will have raised rates by a total of 30.75 percentage points in 2022, setting a new annual record with 40 rate hikes, four pauses, and no cuts if the week’s two decisions match forecasts.
It is anticipated that Mexico’s Banxico central bank will raise its key rate by half a percentage point for the 13th time in a row to 10.50%. Core readings remain above 8%, despite the fact that headline inflation has peaked and is returning to the target of 3%. After additional tightening in early 2023, analysts agree that Banxico’s terminal rate will be 11%.
On Friday, anticipate Banco de la Repblica to raise the key rate by 12% for the eleventh time in a row—the third time in a row by 100 basis points. Although some analysts put the top 100 basis points higher at 13%, economists believe this to be the end of the hiking cycle.
World economy
Because of the currency peg, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority and the Federal Reserve will move in the same direction. This means that rates will probably go up again, and the Philippines and Taiwan’s central banks are also expected to raise rates.
As inflation risks rise, the Bank of Russia is expected to maintain its current rate setting on Friday. The Kremlin is praising the GDP contraction this year that was smaller than expected, but the central bank has warned that the G-7’s new restrictions on oil sales could reduce output when they take effect next year.
Markets will also be keeping an eye on data from China, where retail sales, investment, and industrial output numbers due on Thursday are expected to show a worsening of the economy’s problems in November as the now-loosened Covid Zero restrictions weighed on activity.