Philippine central bank keeps door open to more rate hike

BLOOMBERG 

New Philippine central bank Governor Eli Remolona signalled that further monetary policy tightening is still on the table for the Southeast Asian country, and said it’s “premature” to talk about cutting the key rate.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas remains on the “tightening side” as it monitors upside risks to inflation, including El Nino and wage hikes, Remolona said in Canada in a Bloomberg Television interview, his first since taking over leadership of the central bank.
“For now, we’re contemplating whether to hike or not to hike,” the governor told Bloomberg TV’s Kathleen Hays. “We’re not thinking about whether to cut or not to cut.”
The central bank is also watching for any “sharp” movement in the Philippine peso if the US Federal Reserve further tightens monetary policy, Remolona said. The local currency has strengthened and is among the region’s best performers so far this year.
The Philippine economy remains “very strong,” the central bank chief said, while adding that the BSP would still like to see what impact its most aggressive tightening cycle in two decades — which lifted the key rate to a 16-year high — will have on growth.
A rate cut could be considered if inflation was already “well into” the central bank’s 2%-to-4% target, or if there was a global recession, he said. Headline inflation was at 5.4% in June, still way above the goal despite easing for five straight months.

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