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Jerome Powell gives EM peers a strong reason to cut rates


US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell gave emerging-market central banks another solid reason to lower interest rates.

His signal on Wednesday that the Fed is preparing to lower borrowing costs for the first time in a decade is supportive of higher-yielding currencies, which in turn allows monetary authorities in developing markets to ease policy without triggering an exodus of capital.

That’s an opportunity for policy makers to bolster their economies against slowing growth, subdued inflation and simmering trade tensions that are hurting investment and manufacturing. Across Asia and Europe, factory activity shrank in June while the US showed only meagre economic expansion.

Central banks in Indonesia, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey are among those scheduled to make policy decisions over the coming weeks. Some of them across emerging markets have already shifted gears this year, with Russia, Chile, Malaysia, India and the Philippines lowering rates in recent months.

“Powell’s testimony and likely 25 basis-point easing this month is likely to help spur emerging-market central banks to cut rates,” said Mitul Kotecha, a senior emergingmarkets strategist at TD Securities in Singapore.

Powell’s comments may give Bank Indonesia the impetus it needs to move after leaving its benchmark rate unchanged at 6 per cent this year. It raised interest rates six times last year by a total of 175 basis points amid an emerging-market rout, and has been proceeding cautiously this year to avoid undermining the currency.

South Korea’s central bank, which also meets next week, is expected to cut over coming months.

“The tone of the comments was more dovish than anticipated,” said Stuart Ritson, portfolio manager for emerging-market debt at Aviva Investors in Singapore. “It increases the chance we see the start of an easing cycle in Indonesia next week.”

The People’s Bank of China is already in stimulus mode, though has so far steered clear of adjusting its benchmark rate. Instead, the PBOC is leaning on a varied tool box to push credit into the economy. Governor Yi Gang told Bloomberg News in June that the central bank has “tremendous” policy room.

The nation’s producer price inflation slowed to zero in June from a year earlier, the weakest reading in almost three years, stoking expectations that more easing is on the way.





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