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		Swedish central bank raises key rate, sees more hikes as inflation 
		surges
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		 [April 28, 2022]  By 
		Simon Johnson 
 STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Sweden's central bank 
		hiked its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 0.25% on Thursday and 
		flagged further increases ahead, joining a growing group of central 
		banks tightening policy to curb surging inflation.
 
 The Riksbank has been caught by surprise by price rises, which have 
		climbed higher and proved more persistent than it forecast.
 
 As recently as February, Swedish policy-makers had expected price 
		pressures to be short-lived and that rate hikes would not be needed 
		until 2024.
 
 Now the Riksbank sees two or three more rate hikes this year and more to 
		come in 2023.
 
 "Prices are rising now across the board ... furniture, cars, coffee, 
		bread," Governor Stefan Ingves told reporters. "When it comes to 
		monetary policy in the coming years, it's all about getting the pace of 
		inflation down to somewhere near 2%."
 
 The policy shift brought the Riksbank roughly in line with market 
		forecasts, but with inflation risks on the upside, rate-setters could be 
		forced to move even more forcefully.
 
 "In practice we expect policy-makers to tighten faster than they 
		currently project," David Oxley, Senior European Economist at Capital 
		Economics said.
 
 The benchmark rate has not been in positive territory since 2014.
 
		
		 
		PERFECT STORM
 Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a "special military 
		operation", has added upward pressure to prices, already on the rise due 
		to the lingering effects of the pandemic, with inflation hitting its 
		highest level in decades.
 
		
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			A general view of Sweden's central bank in Stockholm, Sweden, August 
			12, 2016. Picture taken August 12, 2016. REUTERS/Violette Goarant 
            
			 
		Inflation ran at 6.1% in March, far above the Riksbank's 2% target.
 Some central banks, like the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of 
		England, have started hiking rates. Others, like the European Central 
		Bank, are expected to follow suit.
 
 But there are reasons to be cautious.
 
 The war in Ukraine is clouding growth prospects, inflation is squeezing 
		household spending power and higher mortgage costs are likely to hit 
		consumption. There is little central banks can do about energy prices.
 
 It is also unclear whether there has been a permanent shift in 
		inflation- and rates - to much higher levels. Even with the forecast 
		hikes, the real interest rate - borrowing costs minus inflation - should 
		end up around 0%, Ingves said.
 
 "It's not that we are putting on the brakes ... rather that we are 
		easing up on the gas pedal," he said.
 
 The Riksbank's balance sheet will also shrink this year.
 
 The Swedish crown strengthened sharply after the Riksbank's 
		announcement.
 
 (Reporting by Simon Johnson; additional reporting by Johan Ahlander, 
		Anna Ringstrom, Niklas Pollard and Terje Solsvik; Editing by Niklas 
		Pollard and Raissa Kasolowsky)
 
				 
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