Showing posts with label Rates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rates. Show all posts

12 January 2012

Market Rates Inch Upwards amidst Liquidity Tightening to Control Higher Credit Growth

11th January 2012, www.island.lk

The Monetary Board of the Central Bank has decided to hold key interest rates unchanged because it feels rising market interest rates would dampen demand and keep a check on growing credit, the bank announced. However, the sale of dollars to keep the exchange rate stable is drying up rupee liquidity in the system as well, and the Central Bank has made no mention of this aspect in its Monetary Policy Review for January which was released yesterday (Jan. 11).

The repurchase rate will remain unchanged at 7 percent and the reverse repurchase rate will stay steady at 8.50 percent. These rates apply to commercial bank overnight deposits of excess rupees with the Central Bank and for borrowings from the Monetary Authority as a last resort to maintain liquid positions.

Interest rates have come under pressure in recent months as liquidity tightened in the market due to high credit growth and dollar sales by the Central Bank to keep the rupee stable against the dollar despite severe import demand.

"Credit obtained by the private sector remained robust through 2011, and by November, recorded a year-on-year growth of 33.5 percent. Largely reflecting the robust expansion of credit, broad money growth also remained at a level higher than that projected for 2011. Year-on-year growth of broad money (M2b) was 20.6 percent by November. However, market interest rates moved upwards in recent months, in line with changing liquidity conditions in the domestic money market," the Central Bank said.

"As a result, the benchmark yield on one year Treasury bills recorded an increase of around 175 basis points in 2011, while the average weighted deposit rate (AWDR) recorded an increase of about 100 basis points. Meanwhile, the average weighted prime lending rate (AWPR) increased by around 120 basis points in 2011, although at the last auction, the weighted average yields on Treasury bills in the primary market remained unchanged, indicating some stabilisation in market conditions. These moderate upward movements in interest rates are likely to exert a restraining effect on monetary aggregates, which would, in turn, help to curb the build up of demand pressures," it said.

Dealers said pressure on yields was evident at this week’s auction of Treasury bills, but with state-names participating, the Central Bank could control rates to a certain degree. Interbank interest rates increased further yesterday.

The Sri Lanka Inter Bank Offered Rate increased to 9.12 percent yesterday from 8.84 percent the previous day.

Call money market rates for interbank borrowings without security edged up to 9.12 percent from 8.92 percent and market repo rates for borrowings backed by Treasury bills inched up to 8.30 percent from 8.11 percent.

The movement in these rates were kept in check by the Central Bank infusing Rs. 20 billion into the market through a cash auction, buying up Treasury bills at 8.17 percent.

Treasury bills stayed flat at yesterday’s auction.

The rupee closed at Rs. 113.89/90 against the dollar yesterday as the Central Bank continues to sell dollars to stabilise the rate at this level.

The bank has spent more than US$ 850 million on keeping the exchange rate steady since the rupee was devalued last November, Reuters reported yesterday. It spent a net US$ 1.79 billion in the first 10 months of last year to keep depreciation pressure at bay.

"Taking into consideration the above developments, the Monetary Board is of the view that the present policy framework does not require any adjustment and accordingly, at its meeting held on January 10, 2012, decided to maintain the Bank’s policy interest rates unchanged at their current levels, i.e., the Repurchase rate at 7.00 percent and the Reverse Repurchase rate at 8.50 percent, the Central Bank said.

With the country’s balance of payments under siege, as some dealers say, the Central Bank continued to be optimistic about the near term scenario on the external front. Notwithstanding the impact higher interest rates would have on finance costs, the Central Bank says inflation would remain at mid single digit levels throughout this year.

"In the third quarter of 2011, GDP grew by 8.4 per cent, with all three sectors, Agriculture, Industry and Services, contributing towards that growth performance. GDP growth in 2011 is estimated to be around 8.3 per cent. In the meantime, the significant structural changes that have taken place in the Sri Lankan economy over the last several years are expected to provide the momentum for the economy to grow by about 8 per cent in 2012, even in the midst of the slowdown in global economic activity," the Central Bank said.

"Continued development efforts aimed at improving economic and social infrastructure are expected to augment the productive capacity of the country and thereby enable the realisation of the country’s growth potential. Improvements in infrastructure would also help eliminate supply bottlenecks, thus helping to reduce price pressures. As inflation is expected to remain around mid-single digit levels in 2012, broad money (M2b) is expected to grow by around 15 per cent in 2012, as announced in the ‘Road Map for Monetary and Financial Sector Policies for 2012 and beyond’.

"The ongoing structural changes in the economy are also likely to be reflected in the external sector, with earnings from tourism projected to increase to US dollars 1.2 billion, migrant worker remittances expected to increase to US dollars 6.5 billion, foreign direct investment (FDI) projected to record US dollars 2.0 billion, and inflows of debt capital to the private sector also expected to increase significantly in 2012.

"On the fiscal front, preliminary estimates indicate that the government has contained the fiscal deficit to a level within the revised target of 7 per cent of the GDP in 2011. It is expected that the government would bring down the fiscal deficit to 6.2 per cent of the GDP in 2012, thereby augmenting the resource availability to the private sector further," the Central Bank said.

Dealers point out that increasing interest rates would make consolidation of the fiscal balance challenging.

Treasury Secretary Dr. P. B. Jayasundera recently called for a tightening of monetary policy (increasing rates) coupled with another devaluation of the rupee.

The release of the next regular statement on monetary policy will be on 9th February 2012.

Related Info :

Central Bank Unveils a Robust Roadmap for Sri Lanka for 2012 after Recording the 2nd Consecutive Year of over 8pct Growth 

Sri Lanka for Inflation Targeting from 2012 as Priority Shifts to Maintaining Prices over Growth 

Sri Lanka Vulnerable to External Shocks - Moody's

03 February 2011

IMF Says Sri Lanka May Have to Raise Rates as Central Bank Keeps Them Low

02nd February 2011, www.bloomberg.com

The International Monetary Fund said Sri Lanka should be prepared to raise interest rates if inflation risks increase.

“With few signs of demand-driven inflation pressures, the policy stance remains appropriate, but the central bank should be ready to act to head off any emerging inflation risks,” IMF Deputy Managing Director Naoyuki Shinohara said in an e-mailed statement after an IMF board meeting that enabled the disbursement of $217 million as part of a $2.59 billion loan.

IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said yesterday Asian central banks may need to raise borrowing costs to limit the risk of overheating in their economies. Sri Lanka central bank Deputy Governor Dharma Dheerasinghe said in an interview this week that the country will keep interest rates “low” after inflation slowed for a second straight month in January.

“The central bank has been building up reserves while allowing the exchange rate to appreciate,” Shinohara said. “Looking ahead, however, the exchange rate will need to be sufficiently flexible in both directions to safeguard external stability.”

The IMF said that the country has made “good progress” on the economic policies attached to the loan and said that growth “is strengthening” while inflation “remains in check.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Paris at srastello@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net.

Related Info :
Sri Lanka Cuts Key Interest Rates Contrary to India and Thailand as Sri Lanka Inflation Slows for a Second Straight Month

01 February 2011

Sri Lanka Cuts Key Interest Rates Contrary to India and Thailand as Sri Lanka Inflation Slows for a Second Straight Month

31st January 2011, www.bloomberg.com

Sri Lanka’s inflation slowed for a second straight month, supporting the central bank’s decision to cut borrowing costs this month and spur economic growth.

Consumer prices in the capital, Colombo, rose 6.8 percent in January from a year earlier after gaining 6.9 percent in December, the statistics office said on its website today. The median estimate of five economists in a Bloomberg News survey was for a gain of 7 percent.

Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal this month cut a key interest rate for the third time since July, contrasting with counterparts from India to Thailand who tightened monetary policy. The floods in Sri Lanka’s northeast won’t prompt a change in rates, Cabraal said Jan. 18, pointing to adequate rice stocks that can check any spurt in food prices.

“With growth being the priority, the central bank will take every opportunity to keep borrowing costs low,” Sanjeewa Fernando, an analyst at CT Smith Stockbrokers Pvt Ltd in Colombo, said before the report.

To keep prices under control, Sri Lanka this month almost halved import taxes on milk powder to 28 rupees a kilogram. The government also slashed customs duty on gasoline by 67 percent to five rupees (4 cents) a liter.

“The government’s measures will keep a check on inflationary pressures,” CT Smith’s Fernando said.

Sri Lanka is aiming to accelerate growth to 8.5 percent in 2011 and 9 percent in 2012 from an estimated 8 percent expansion in 2010, Cabraal said Jan. 4.

India on Jan. 26 boosted rates for the seventh time in a year to rein in inflation. Thailand on Jan. 12 increased its benchmark rate for the fourth time in seven months.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anusha Ondaatjie in Colombo at anushao@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephen Foxwell at sfoxwell@bloomberg.net

11 January 2011

Sri Lanka Central Bank Cuts Rates for Faster Economic Growth while Counterparts in India and Pakistan Raised Them

11th January 2011, www.bloomberg.com

Sri Lanka’s central bank cut a key interest rate for the third time in seven months to help spur economic expansion.

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka lowered the reverse repurchase rate by half a percentage point to 8.5 percent, adding to the cuts in July and August, according to a statement on the Colombo-based bank’s website today. It reduced the repurchase rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 7 percent.

Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal said last week Sri Lanka is aiming to accelerate growth to 8.5 percent in 2011 and 9 percent in 2012 from an 8 percent expansion in 2010. He has room to keep borrowing costs low as the inflation reading in December was around half the average level in the past five years.

“Inflation has been contained so far and the central bank is not overly concerned about it yet,” Leif Eskesen, Singapore- based chief economist at HSBC Holdings Plc, said before the report. Still, “strong economic growth is expected to translate into more demand-led price pressures going ahead.”

Today’s move will also help cut capital inflows and check gains in the rupee, an issue that Cabraal said in a Nov. 16 interview is a concern for the central bank. Sri Lanka could cope with inflation, he said.

Rupee, Bonds

The Sri Lankan rupee, which has risen about 3.5 percent since the end of a 26-year civil war in May 2009, was little changes at 110.8 against the dollar at 9:14 a.m. in Colombo, according to Bloomberg data. The yield on the three-year bond maturing in March 2014 fell 30 basis points to 8.05 percent, according to the Commercial Bank of Ceylon Plc.

Consumer prices in the capital, Colombo, rose 6.9 percent last month from a year earlier, less than the average 11.6 percent in the five years through December 2010, as an expansion in farm cultivation after the end of the war boosted agriculture production.

“The favorable macroeconomic environment provides the required space and comfort for new and wider investments to be made in

all sectors of the economy, including new growth areas, without fueling undue inflationary pressures in the period ahead, thereby firmly supporting the country’s growth potential,” according to the central bank statement.

Sri Lanka plans to introduce inflation targeting in its monetary policy in order to keep consumer-price growth low for long periods, the central bank said on Nov. 22. It didn’t say what level of inflation it would be targeting.

Company Investments

Optimism about the Indian Ocean island nation’s growth prospects has encouraged investments from companies including Shangri-La Asia Ltd., helping make Sri Lanka’s benchmark All- Share Index the world’s second-best performer in 2010. The index rose 0.1 percent in early trading today.

Consumer and corporate credit grew 23 percent in November from a year earlier, more than double the level in July, the bank said today.

Sri Lanka plans to ease foreign investment rules in businesses including tourism and education to further support growth, Cabraal said last week.

Cabraal cut rates even as counterparts in India and Pakistan raised them in 2010, said Jan. 4 that the central bank will “respond appropriately” if excessive consumer demand stokes price gains.

India on Nov. 2 boosted rates for the sixth time in 2010 to rein in inflation. Pakistan increased its benchmark discount rate on Nov. 29 for the third time since late July.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anusha Ondaatjie in Colombo at anushao@bloomberg.net