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JOHANNESBURG, Nov 17 (Reuters) – The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) will keep its repo rate unchanged on Nov. 23 and wait until May 2024 before cutting it, a Reuters poll found, as policymakers try to navigate risks to inflation and the timing of when global interest rates will start to fall.
All 20 economists polled in the past four days were unanimous the central bank would keep its repo rate steady next Thursday at 8.25%.
The SARB kept its main interest rate unchanged in September even with inflation well within its 3-6% target range, stressing deteriorating public finances risked fuelling price pressures.
The central bank is expected to hold policy steady in January and March 2024 and then cut by 25 basis points to 8.00% in May, the median from a sample of 13 economists showed. The previous poll predicted a cut in the first quarter.
However there was no clear majority on what exactly it will do in May, its only meeting in the second quarter, with five predicting rates will be 25 bps lower then, two saying 50 bps lower and six forecasting no move.
Eight of 10 economists responding to an extra question said the bigger risk on the timing of the first SARB interest rate cut was it comes later than they expect rather than sooner.
Traders bet this week that news of cooling inflation in the U.S. consumer price index data will allow the U.S. Federal Reserve to forgo any more interest rate hikes and to start cutting rates by May. Producer price index figures also pointed to cooling.
Elize Kruger, an independent economist, said the SARB will be conservative on the timing of its own monetary policy loosening, especially should the narrative on global interest rate expectations change to suggest higher for even longer.
“I do expect an unchanged stance for next week. The better than expected U.S. CPI & PPI numbers definitely play in favour of my view we have reached a plateau on local interest rates, as well as a lower oil price, stronger rand and notable fuel price declines on the cards for early December,” she said.
A separate Reuters poll earlier this month showed emerging market currencies will take well into next year to start making noticeable gains against a retreating U.S. dollar, despite a growing view the interest rate cycle has peaked.
The Reuters poll suggests South African rates will be cut by another 25 bps to 7.75% in either July or September and by the same margin in November. A 25 bps cut was pencilled in for early 2025 before a drop to 7.00% by the end of that year.
Inflation is expected to slow to a median 4.9% next year and 4.6% the year after, a 0.1 percentage point nudge up from last month in both years. This year it is estimated at 5.8%.
Economic growth was put at a median 1.3% next year – 0.1 percentage points better than in last month’s poll – up from a 0.7% estimate for this year. Power shortages have hampered business activity in South Africa.
(For other stories from the Reuters global economic poll: (Full Story))
Reporting by Vuyani Ndaba; Editing by Jonathan Cable, Ross Finley and Susan Fenton
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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