By CentralBankNews.info
The Czech National Bank (CNB) left its benchmark two-week repo rate at 0.05 percent and confirmed that it will “not discontinue the use of the exchange rate as a monetary policy instrument before 2017 Q2” and its board considers it likely that this commitment will be stopped “around the middle of 2017.”
In an update to its economic forecasts, the central bank of the Czech Republic raised its forecast for inflation following the sharp rise at the end of 2016 and expects inflation to continue to rise into the upper half of its target range before easing back toward the target in the first half of 2018.
The CNB targets inflation of 2.0 percent, plus/minus 1 percentage point.
“According to the new forecast, the conditions for sustainable fulfilment of the 2% inflation target in the future, i.e. also after the assumed return to the conventional monetary policy regime, will be met from around mid-2017,” the central bank said.
The CNB has kept a cap on the exchange rate of the koruna of around 27 to the euro since November 2013 in an effort to stave off deflation after cutting its benchmark two-week repo rate to its current level of 0.05 percent in November 2012.
The koruna has been coming under sustained upward pressure in recent weeks as investors speculate the CNB may scrap its exchange rate commitment earlier than mid-year following the rise in inflation to a four-year high of 2.0 percent in December and based on the experience from the Swiss National Bank’s surprise lifting of its cap on the Swiss franc two years ago, which led to a jump in its exchange rate.
The CNB assumes that market interest rates in the Czech Republic will remain at their current low level until the middle of this year and then rise after the exchange rate commitment is discontinued, leaving a positive differential against rates in the euro area as the European Central Bank (ECB) continues with quantitative easing.
The exchange rate of the koruna is forecast to appreciate against the euro in the second half of this year though the CNB cautioned that this forecast does not take into account the impact of exporters’ hedging of exchange rate risks as well as the closing of koruna positions by financial investors.
“The market ‘overboughtness’ may even lead to depreciation of the koruna,” CNB said.
The recent rise in inflation is mainly due to a recovery in food prices and higher fuel prices with higher wages expected to continue to boost domestic costs while a rise in producer prices should also push up core inflation, the CNB said.
In a summary of its forecast – the full inflation report will be released tomorrow – the CNB expects inflation in the first half of 2018 to average 2.5 percent, up from its previous forecast of 2.3 percent, and then ease to 2.3 percent, unchanged, in the second half.
Economic growth is expected to be slightly lower than previously forecast due to a lower contribution of exports.
The CNB estimated growth in 2016 of 2.4 percent, down from its previous forecast of 2.8 percent, and then expand by 2.8 percent this year, down from 2.9 percent, and remain at 2.8 percent growth in 2018, also lower than 2.9 percent previously forecast.
The Czech National Bank issued the following statement:
“At its meeting today, the Bank Board of the Czech National Bank decided unanimously to keep interest rates unchanged at technical zero. The Bank Board decided to continue using the exchange rate as an additional instrument for easing the monetary conditions. It confirmed the CNB’s commitment to intervene on the foreign exchange market if needed to weaken the koruna against the euro so that the exchange rate of the koruna is kept close to CZK 27 to the euro. In line with this, the CNB still stands ready to intervene automatically without any time or volume limits. The asymmetric nature of this exchange rate commitment is unchanged.
This decision is underpinned by a new macroeconomic forecast. The forecast assumes that the exchange rate will be used as a monetary policy instrument until mid-2017. At the close of 2016, inflation rose sharply and returned to the 2% target. According to the forecast, inflation will increase further into the upper half of the tolerance band around the target and return to the target from above at the monetary policy horizon. According to the new forecast, the conditions for sustainable fulfilment of the 2% inflation target in the future, i.e. also after the assumed return to the conventional monetary policy regime, will be met from around mid-2017 onwards.
A need to maintain expansionary monetary conditions to the current extent persists. The Bank Board therefore states again that the Czech National Bank will not discontinue the use of the exchange rate as a monetary policy instrument before 2017 Q2. The Bank Board still considers it likely that the commitment will be discontinued around the middle of 2017.
According to the assumptions of the new forecast, economic growth in the effective euro area will slow further at the start of this year but then gradually return towards 2%. The decline in industrial producer prices in the euro area will fade away in early 2017. These prices will then rise at a pace of just over 2% year on year. Consumer price inflation will go up as well, but it will not reach 2% before the end of 2018. The outlook for three-month EURIBOR market interest rates is negative over the entire forecast horizon, reflecting continued easy monetary policy of the European Central Bank. The ECB’s policy is also reflected in a weakening of the euro against the US dollar. The outlook for the Brent crude oil price foresees stability close to the current level.
The rise in domestic inflation at the end of last year was due mainly to a recovery in food price growth and an unwinding of the year-on-year fall in fuel prices. Core inflation, i.e. adjusted inflation excluding fuels, increased as well. Its evolution primarily reflected growth in the domestic economy and wages. In December, it was also affected by an increase in prices linked with the launch of the first phase of electronic sales registration. According to the forecast, inflation will increase further into the upper half of the tolerance band around the target. It will then return to the 2% target from above at the monetary policy horizon, i.e. in the first half of next year. Domestic costs will continue to rise apace, due mainly to rising wages. Coupled with renewed growth in industrial producer prices in the euro area, this will lead to a further increase in core inflation. Counteracting this will be a strengthening of the koruna expected by the forecast from mid-2017 onwards. Monetary policy-relevant inflation, i.e. inflation adjusted for the first-round effects of changes to indirect taxes, will differ only marginally from headline inflation.
The growth of the Czech economy eased further in 2016 Q3. According to the assumptions of the forecast, it reached 2.4% in 2016 as a whole. The rate of growth will increase to almost 3% in the next two years. The economy will be supported by continued growth in external demand, a gradual renewal of growth in government investment and still easy monetary conditions. However, the monetary conditions will start to shift towards a neutral effect following the assumed discontinuation of the CNB’s exchange rate commitment in mid-2017. The continued economic growth will lead to a further increase in wage growth. The unemployment rate will decrease only slightly.
The forecast assumes that market interest rates will be flat at their current very low level and the exchange rate will be used as a monetary policy instrument until mid-2017. Consistent with the forecast is an increase in market interest rates thereafter. The appreciation of the exchange rate following the return to the conventional monetary policy regime is dampened in the forecast among other things by the fact that the weaker exchange rate of the koruna has been passing through to the price level and other nominal variables in the period since the exchange rate commitment was introduced. Nevertheless, a positive interest rate differential against the euro and the effect of the ECB’s quantitative easing will manifest themselves. Renewed – although much slower than in the pre-crisis period – real convergence of the Czech economy to the advanced euro area countries will act in the same direction. According to the forecast, the koruna will thus appreciate against the euro in the second half of 2017. However, the forecast does not take into account that the appreciation of the koruna may be strongly dampened by hedging of exchange rate risk by exporters before the exit from the CNB’s exchange rate commitment, as well as by the closing of koruna positions by financial investors. This market “overboughtness” may even lead to depreciation of the koruna.
Compared to the previous forecast, the inflation outlook for this year is higher. This is due to the surprisingly strong increase in inflation at the close of last year, the higher short-term inflation forecast and faster growth in nominal wages. At the monetary policy horizon, however, the new inflation outlook differs only slightly from the previous forecast. The forecast for the growth of the Czech economy in the near future has been revised downwards on account of a lower contribution of net exports. From the whole-year perspective, however, the economic growth forecast for this year and the next is only slightly lower. Following the assumed exit from the exchange rate commitment, interest rates will rise at a slower pace than according to the previous forecast.
The Bank Board assessed the risks to the forecast at the monetary policy horizon as being balanced. The main uncertainty is the evolution of the koruna exchange rate following the exit from the exchange rate commitment, which may fluctuate in either direction in the short term. The CNB will stand ready to use its instruments to mitigate potential excessive exchange rate fluctuations following the exit from the commitment.”