Unexpected aggressive rate hike: A view from our experts
South African Reserve Bank (SARB) Governor Lesetja Kganyago announced an unexpected repo rate hike of 50 basis points (bps) to 7.75%, reaching its highest level since 2009. Below are the latest views from our senior investment team on the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) outcome and its likely impact.
Patrick Buthelezi, Economist
The South African Reserve Bank hiked the interest rate by an unexpected 50 basis points (bps) to 7.75%, reaching its highest level since 2009. Three MPC members voted for 50 bps, while two preferred 25 bps. The committee has raised the borrowing cost by a cumulative 425 bps since November 2021 and monetary policy works with a lag. The monetary policy stance has moved into tightening territory.
The MPC was proactive as they started the rate hiking cycle while inflation was still within the SARB inflation target range at 5.0% during its November 2021 meeting. Inflation had deviated from the previous mid-point target of 4.5%. The SARB is clearly committed to bringing inflation down towards the mid-point.
Although headline consumer price index (CPI) re-accelerated to 7.0% in February 2023, the cyclical high is behind us. The SARB revised its inflation forecast significantly higher on the back of upward pressure on core goods and food prices. They forecast inflation to be sustained at around 4.5% from the fourth quarter of 2024 . It assesses the risk to the inflation outlook to still be biased on the upside. In terms of inflation expectations, real GDP revised marginally lower to 0.2% in 2023 on the back of extensive electricity outages and logistical constraints. The medium-term growth forecast has revised slightly upwards.
Looking ahead, the SARB will probably pause and assess the impact on inflation and the economy. This possibly marked the top of the hiking cycle. However, this will hinge on inflation prospects and global developments. The bar for policy easing is high; it would require inflation to slow and be sustained towards the mid-point.
Mokgatla Madisha: Head of fixed income
“Today’s decision is good news for money market portfolios which have large exposure to floating rate instruments. Investors in those funds should see a higher yield.”
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