Take Five: Week of the central banks
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[March 13, 2021] (Reuters)
- 1/ TIME TO PUSH BACK?
After a stunning selloff in U.S. Treasuries took benchmark 10-year
yields above 1.6%, the highest in a year, the March 16-17 Federal
Reserve meeting will be watched closely for hints policymakers are
concerned about yields, asset bubbles and inflation.
A repricing of market interest rate expectations to anticipate a Fed
hike as early as late 2022 is at odds with the Fed's aim of keeping
rates unchanged until the end of 2023. The Fed has appeared unperturbed
so far by higher bond yields, but it may feel it's time to push back
against those rate-hike bets.
It is also expected to release fresh forecasts on economic growth as
vaccines are distributed.
2/ MIXING MESSAGES AT BOJ
The central bank which pioneered yield curve control faces one of its
toughest policy reviews on March 18-19.
The Bank of Japan will likely insert clearer guidance in its statement
on what it sees as an acceptable level of fluctuation in long-term
interest rates, according to sources -- a sign it won't tolerate rises
that hurt the economy.
Governor Haruhiko Kuroda and his deputy Masayoshi Amamiya have sent
mixed messages on loosening the 10-year yield target band. Higher yields
would acknowledge a global move higher but might spur unintended worries
about policy tightening.
Given a nascent economic recovery, the BOJ may even suggest scope for
more negative short-term rates. In the midst of this, financial year-end
flows back into yen are accelerating. A currency rally will add to the
BOJ's headaches.
3/BOE, NORGES BANK TOO
Thursday brings central bank meetings in Britain and Norway.
The Bank of England is not seen unveiling additional policy easing
despite concerns over the recent spike in borrowing costs.
Instead, any action such as upping the BoE's bond-buying firepower is
likely to come later in the year - perhaps in May, when the next set of
economic forecasts emerge.
With first-quarter GDP data expected to show a near 4% drop on the back
of pandemic-linked lockdowns and Brexit disruptions, economic recovery
is expected to be gradual. A majority of economists polled by Reuters
expect GDP will take two years to return to pre-COVID-19 levels.
Norges Bank is also tipped to keep rates unchanged but it may adopt a
much more hawkish tone given signs of economic recovery in Norway,
especially in housing.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, DC, U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie
4/EMERGING RATES ON RISE
In emerging markets, meanwhile, the only way for interest rates to go
may be up. That's the message we might hear from several central banks
over coming days.
Most have faced rising inflation pressures for some time but now they
are also confronted by higher U.S. Treasury yields, which raise
borrowing costs for everyone. For oil importers, Brent crude prices
above $70 is an added problem -- all this while economies are still
reeling from the coronavirus impact.
Central banks in Brazil and Turkey -- meeting on Wednesday and Thursday
respectively -- are most likely to raise rates. Markets will also find
out on Thursday if Indonesia's rate-cutting cycle has come to an end.
Egypt meanwhile is seen standing pat on Thursday even in the face of
rising commodity prices and inflation nudging higher.
5/ELECTIONS
In the euro area, investors' focus turns to politics.
The German states of Baden-Wuerttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate hold
elections on Sunday that are seen as a key test of voter sentiment ahead
of national polls in September which will determine who succeeds Angela
Merkel as Chancellor.
The Baden-Wuerttemberg vote is one to watch, since a face mask
procurement scandal has muddied the waters for Merkel's Christian
Democrats, whose leader Armin Laschet hopes to become the next
Chancellor.
Then there are Dutch national elections on March 15-17, for which
authorities are relaxing evening curfew rules introduced to combat the
spread of COVID-19. Polls suggest Prime Minister Mark Rutte's
conservative VVD will remain the largest party, although public support
has declined recently over his coronavirus policies.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee, Karin Strohecker and Dhara Ranasinghe
in London, Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss and Kate Duguid in New York and
Vidya Ranganathan in Singapore; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and
Catherine Evans)
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