Asian central banks hold their own after Fed signals
stimulus rollback
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[September 21, 2017]
By Marius Zaharia
HONG KONG (Reuters) - As the Federal
Reserve signals an end to its decade of unconventional monetary
stimulus, divergence between the policies of the U.S. and Asian central
banks is growing, a stark contrast to an era when regional rate moves
closely tracked the United States.
The Fed on Wednesday said it would begin to reduce its $4.2 trillion in
holdings of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities in October, bought
in response to the 2008-09 financial crisis. When the Fed first hinted
at this move in 2014, central banks in Indonesia and India followed up
with rate hikes.
But on Thursday, policymakers in Japan, Philippines and Taiwan held
interest rates steady. Indonesia is seen doing just that on Friday with
some analysts even calling an outside chance of another cut there after
last month's surprise easing.
Stable current account positions in Asia mean policymakers in the region
are less concerned about sudden capital flight than they previously
were, which has allowed them to focus their policies on economic
fundamentals rather than competition for global capital.
"There are many structural drivers holding down inflation around the
world and we see a benign inflation outlook across Asia. This should
keep a friendly monetary policy tone for markets," said Fan Cheuk Wan,
head of investment strategy and advisory for Asia at HSBC Private
Banking.
"We expect Asian central banks to remain accommodative."
While Asian shares on Thursday fell after the Fed's meeting, there were
no signs of major financial market shocks.
Central banks in developed markets, mainly in the West, have turned more
hawkish this year as their economies picked up steam. But stimulus
withdrawal in these countries is likely to be gradual and sensitive to
economic data and market fluctuations, which would support risk
appetite.
Strong export growth and stable currencies in Asia have attracted funds
into the region's asset markets, which means policymakers have not felt
pressure to keep capital onshore through higher interest rates.
As a result, Asian central banks are not expected to mirror the Fed rate
cycle as closely as in the past. Like Indonesia, India is also seen as
potentially cutting rates in coming months.
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A police officer keeps watch in front of the U.S. Federal Reserve
building in Washington, DC, U.S. on October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
'NO AUTOMATIC IMPLICATIONS'
In Japan, the central bank's new board member, Goushi Kataoka, surprisingly
voted against the decision to keep interest rate targets unchanged, arguing the
current easing steps were not enough to hit the inflation goal. Bank of Japan
Governor Haruhiko Kuroda responded by saying U.S. interest rates rises did not
demand Japan follows suit.
Both the Philippine and Taiwan central banks kept their benchmark rates
unchanged with their respective inflation projections showing no meaningful
pickup in expected price pressures.
In Australia, central bank governor Philip Lowe said interest rates were more
likely to go up than down but would stay at record lows for some time as
inflation remained weak. Lowe added there were no "automatic implications" from
global rate hikes.
Markets <0#YIB:> see Australia hiking in June.
In Indonesia, 20 out of 26 analysts polled by Reuters predicted the central bank
will hold rates at 4.50 percent at its policy meeting on Friday, while the other
six saw another 25 basis point cut. Last month, Bank Indonesia (BI) became the
second major Asian central bank to cut rates this year after India.
Southeast Asia's largest economy was the only one in the region where
second-quarter growth failed to beat expectations. Its predominantly consumption
driven economy has struggled to track the export boom seen in neighboring
countries and its inflation is seen trending to the lower end of the central
bank's 3-5 percent target.
"BI is poised to follow through with another rate cut in the fourth quarter as
inflation continues to ease," ING senior economist Joey Cuyegkeng said.
HSBC's Fan expects a cut in the second quarter next year.
(Reporting by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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