Bank Indonesia leaves interest rates on hold

Bloomberg

Indonesia’s central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged for a second month, while keeping the door open for more policy action if needed.
After hiking by 175 basis points since May, Bank Indonesia kept its seven-day reverse repurchase rate at 6 percent, as predicted by all 26 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Governor Perry Warjiyo said the rate was near its peak, but the policy stance is still “hawkish” and policy makers will remain “pre-emptive and forward-looking.”
“This decision is consistent with efforts to lower the current-account deficit until it reaches the safe level and to maintain the attractiveness of domestic financial assets,” Warjiyo said at a briefing
in Jakarta. Bank Indonesia was one of the most aggressive central banks in Asia last year, tightening policy in the face of an emerging-market sell-off triggered by rising US interest rates. A more cautious Federal Reserve and the BI’s proactive policy action have helped the rupiah rebound almost 7 percent against the dollar in the past three months.
The central bank will remain vigilant and take steps to guard the currency, Warjiyo said. Officials took the faltering global economy and the outlook for the Fed policy action into account, and expects two rate hikes in the US this year The trade and current-account shortfalls remain a concern. The nation posted its worst-ever trade deficit last year, while the current-account shortfall ballooned to 3.4 percent of gross domestic product in the third quarter of 2018
“Cuts are coming, but looks like a prolonged pause for now,” said Mohamed Faiz Nagutha, an economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Singapore. He said the second half of 2019 is “still the most likely” time frame for policy easing. “They are unlikely to ease policy in the medium term given that the trade and current account deficit will remain high this year,” said David Sumual, chief economist of PT Bank Central Asia in Jakarta. Warjiyo had been signalling the central bank may be close to the end of its policy tightening cycle, telling lawmakers the benchmark rate was near its peak.

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