Central Bank News Link List – Mar 27, 2013: Cyprus capital controls first in EU could last years

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Silver ‘$100 Within Two Years’

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You could say that buying gold is like drinking vintage Grange wine.

In which case buying silver is like doing double shots of Bundaberg rum.

They both have the desired effect – the latter does it more effectively, but at the risk of a bigger hangover. Silver’s volatility means it swings wildly between the buy and the sell zone.

The good news is that Aussie dollar denominated silver is in the buy zone right now. And if history is any guide, it could take off like a rocket from here.

Last year it bounced 35% in two months from the buy zone. The time before that was as far back as 2010, when it soared 182% in a year.

So what could be in store from here?

In yesterday’s Money Morning, I gave a sneak preview of my recent interview with Eric Sprott, CEO of Sprott Asset Management, who manages $11 billion in the precious metals market.

His views on gold were very bullish. But today I’d like to show you just how bullish he is on silver…

But first let’s back up a second.

The Long Rise of Silver

I’d like to show you where we are in the decade plus bull run in silver, and why this should be an ideal time to buy it.

Below is a weekly chart for Aussie dollar denominated silver since 2003. It’s an incredibly strong chart. The first thing to notice is that the 200-week moving average (red line) shows a strong and completely intact uptrend.

Silver Bull Run Alive and Well – and the Price is Back in the Buy Zone

Source: StockCharts

After the wild move in 2011 that saw silver almost triple, it has now almost finished a painful, two-year long hangover. Most importantly the price has now come back to rest on the ‘buy zone’ – the 200-week simple moving average.

Silver has tested this level just seven times in the last ten years, and bounced off it each time. In some cases, like last year, it was a move of 35% lasting just a few months. In other cases the price can increase in multiples. It almost tripled after it hit this 200 week moving average in 2010; and more than doubled after its 2005 skirmish.

So what will we see from silver this time? I’m confident at the very least of a move as big as last year’s. After all, that would only require hitting $37, where it has been several times in the recent past.

But really we’re looking for the Big Kahuna: when silver increases in multiples to reach a new high.

Will we have to endure any more false starts before this happens? It’s possible. The big moves of 2005 and 2010 both had two practice runs before taking off.

You can see in the chart that in both cases, it was eighteen months between the first bounce off the 200-week moving average, and the bounce that turned into the big one. If this historical pattern repeats, we’d need one more short-term move on this bounce, before we get the big one from late 2013.

At the very least buying now should be a profit opportunity for the short-term trader, but more importantly, it should be a cheaper buy-in for the long-term silver investor.

Very few investors have taken a bigger stake in the silver market than Eric Sprott. So when I had his ear for 25 minutes in Hong Kong last week, I was sure to ask his view on silver – as well as silver stocks too.

Q+A with Eric Sprott – Full Transcript on Monday

I’ll save the whole transcript for Easter Monday, but here are a few sneak preview quotes from the world famous portfolio manager, running $11 billion in the precious metals markets, and one who calls silver the ‘investment of the decade’.

Alex: …Now silver as I know is something that is very close to your heart as well. I’ve been recommending silver for some time, and I own some. It’s been very frustrating for silver investors for more than eighteen months. But that is the nature of the beast with silver. You have a very disappointing period, and then it will suddenly double in a period of months.

Eric: Well I think the same thing goes on in the silver market that goes on in the gold market, except it is more obvious. When silver got to $49.50 not that long ago, it traded over a billion ounces of paper silver in a day, and we only produce 800 million ounces of silver in the mines a year. I always ask people to think about the guy who sold a billion ounces of silver that day – what’s he thinking? There’s no way he can supply it. And therefore it must be somebody who thinks that by selling the billion ounces he can dampen the enthusiasm, which they did, of course they had the changes in the Comex rules all at the same time which helped them.

But I think that silver will triple the performance of gold, because ultimately we will go from a 55 to 1 ratio which we’re at today, down to 16 to 1 which was the typical ratio. And we see lots of signs in the silver market for incredible demand. I’m just awestruck that in the US, the US mint sells as many dollars of silver as they sell of gold, which means they are selling 55 times as many ounces of silver as gold. And yet the mines only produce 11 times more. I mean something’s got to give here. We can’t have the world buying 55 times more silver than gold, when quite frankly for investment its only available three ounces of silver for every ounce of gold, as most silver is used for industrial purposes.

So I’m pretty upbeat about silver!

Alex: So you think $100 silver is realistic in the next year or two?

Eric: Well I think obviously with gold at $1600, I would believe that silver should be at a hundred. Does it happen in one to two years? Maybe not, but I would certainly say in two to five years it happens. And that’s just with gold staying still!

Fortifying stuff indeed! And based on silver’s history, is quite realistic too.

But if you’re buying silver, a few key things to recall are:

  • To buy as low as possible (like now), and with as low a margin as possible
  • Hold with a long-term view, and
  • Expect any number of swings and roundabouts in the interim!

Don’t Forget Silver Stocks

In yesterday’s Money Morning I quoted Eric saying that, in the case of gold stocks, they outperform the metal price at least two to three times when the metal rallies. So, given that he thinks silver could triple from here, what does this mean for silver stocks?

This chart shows the global silver stocks index since 2010. You can see that that silver stocks have underperformed the metal by 28%! It’s not quite as poor a performance as in the gold space, but there’s clearly room for improvement too!

Silver Stocks Badly Underperform Silver in the Last Few Years

Source: StockCharts


So from these depressed levels, I was curious to know what Eric thought about silver stocks, particularly if he could see silver price tripling:


Alex: …So how do you feel about silver equities? Could we transplant the same argument from gold and gold equities, to silver and silver equities?

Eric: Well I have a very disproportionate amount in silver equities. Just on the bet that silver far outperforms gold, and I want to be where the action will be, so I obviously favour silver equities over gold equities.

Alex: Producers, developers?

Eric: Producers, developers, even guys who just have deposits. We’ve all lost interest in the deposits these days. But if we start to see the price of silver go up, believe me, the interest will come back for the guys with deposits.

Alex: And from extremely oversold levels too.

Eric: Extremely oversold levels yes!

So there you have it. Silver stocks could even outdo silver, which Eric calls the investment of the decade.

So if you’re the type of investor that can hold your nose and buy, then it sounds as though over the next few years silver equities could deliver more fun than a whole case of Bundaberg rum!

There was far more to this exceptional interview, so don’t forget to tune in on Monday for the full transcript…

Dr Alex Cowie
Editor, Diggers & Drillers

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From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Australia’s Energy Stock BLOWOUT

Daily Reckoning: Why Watching Europe is Paramount

Money Morning: 11 Billion Reasons to Expect a 200% Move in Gold Stocks Within Months

Pursuit of Happiness: Learn This Lesson from Cyprus Before it’s Too Late

Diggers and Drillers:
How You Can Use a Bottomed-Out Silver Price to Quadruple Your Returns

Why The Federal Reserve and Central Banks Should Be Abolished

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Last week I spent two days speaking to senior government officials and business leaders in Bermuda, which is one of the world’s leading international insurance and reinsurance hubs. The men and women in the room are responsible for hundreds of millions in assets worldwide.

I spoke for over an hour on the implications and opportunities of the financial crisis.

As I was finishing up, I received one of the most provocative questions I’ve gotten in a long time from the darkness beyond the stage lights: ‘Does any nation really need a ‘Fed’?’ asked one of the directors.

The answer is, unequivocally, no. Especially if it’s modelled after the United States Federal Reserve.

The individual depositors who were the protected class when the Fed was originally formed are little more than cannon fodder today. Instead, the banks the Federal Reserve supports have become the protected few.

To be honest, I didn’t always think this way. For much of my career, I took the Federal Reserve for granted, believing like millions of Americans that it was acting in our country’s best interest.

Then I sat down with legendary investor Jim Rogers in Singapore a few years back at the onset of the current financial crisis. During our discussion, he pointed out several things that really made me think about the Fed and its role in not only creating this crisis, but making it worse.

A 100 Year-Old Affront to Freedom

The American Federal Reserve as it operates today is an insult to anybody who believes in economic and political freedom. In an era of globally-linked finance, the very concept of a Fed is an abomination.

I realize that this may not sit well with you if this is the first time you’ve thought about the issue.

So let’s walk you through a few things that will challenge your thinking…

The Federal Reserve was established in 1913. It’s only 100 years old. And it’s anything but an original part of America’s economic machine.

Its original purpose was simple: To prevent banking failures.

At the time, the United States had just gone through the vicious bank panic of 1907. That crisis was significant because it saw the failure of Knickerbocker Trust, which sought – but failed – to receive financial support from its peers. Unable to obtain liquidity from any source, Knickerbocker Trust collapsed.

This affected public psychology deeply because Knickerbocker’s peers not only chose not to rescue Knickerbocker, but also suspended payments to each other.

This boomeranged through the system and came to roost at the retail level when the public figured out that they didn’t have access to their money, especially in ‘specie’, meaning in gold. Bank runs and closures became the norm.

The New York Stock Exchange fell 50% before financier J.P. Morgan famously locked banking executives in his personal library and formulated a liquidity injection that ultimately calmed everything down.

Loath to waste a good crisis, legislators stepped up to the plate by agitating for centralized banking as a means of restoring public confidence while providing the banking system with a source of liquidity that would prevent their wholesale collapse.

And they got it a few years later…in spades.

What’s really interesting to me looking back using today’s lens is how sophisticated the machinery of the time was. Powerful public and private figures worked together, often in great secrecy like they did at Jekyll Island, Georgia, to build the framework for the Fed. The Wall Street Journal published a 14-part series highlighting the need for a central bank. Citizen groups and trade organizations piled on.

And voilà…the Fed was born under the guise of a politically independent institution that would stabilize the financial system, protect the monetary supply against inflation, and maintain credit as needed by injecting stimulus when the economy flagged and withdrawing it when things were overheated.

In the terminology of the day, this was viewed as giving elasticity to the dollar which would, in turn, establish more effective control over the banking system.

None other than the Comptroller of the Currency observed that the Fed would supply a circulating medium that is ‘absolutely safe’. What irony.

Fast forward to today.

Every 1913 dollar is now worth US$0.04 cents. Goods and services that cost a buck back then now will set you back $21. Where’s the stability in that?

If that’s not practical enough, consider wages.

According to the US Census Bureau, the median income of male workers in 2010 was $32,137 while the median income of male workers in 1968 was $5,980. On the surface this isn’t too shabby. It’s a 437.4% increase over 42 years – or an average income gain of 10.41% a year, over the same time period.

However, if you run the numbers the other way, using 2010 dollars, a very different picture emerges. You quickly see that median earning male workers actually have less purchasing power today than they did 42 years ago ($32,844 vs. $32,137).

That’s your Federal Reserve at work. It’s robbing America by gradually sucking the life out of the financial system. Over time, it will cause the system to collapse – just ask anybody in the former Soviet Union. They had a ‘Fed’ and no Soviet bank ever failed per se. However, the state eventually took so much wealth from the people that the entire system broke.

Taxation Courtesy of the Printing Press

Legions of spend-it-while-you-can politicians and economists don’t see it this way. And neither, perhaps more importantly, does sitting Federal Reserve Chairman Dr. Ben Bernanke.

He said explicitly on November 21st, 2002, in remarks to the National Economists Club that, ‘by increasing the number of dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of the dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services.’

In other words, he believes he can create economic value merely by printing money. It’s no wonder that he continues to print money today (euphemistically calling it ‘quantitative easing’) knowing full well that he is eviscerating the dollar. He believes that doing so is the same thing as raising prices by managing inflation.

In fact, inflation is actually defined as the artificial increase in the supply of money and credit. It’s a tax by any other name. So what Bernanke is really doing is artificially taxing the American public by debasing its currency. It’s no wonder that more people have less. But here’s where it really hits home for me.

When the Federal Reserve was created, it was envisioned as a source of liquidity for the banking system. The presumption was that any specific failure in the banking system subject to the Fed’s oversight would be offset by the available cash from the government because it had centralised the credit risks associated with their lending portfolios.

In today’s environment, credit is diffused globally far beyond the Fed’s reach. What’s more, there’s too much of it and the banking system is now so big that the risks it holds dwarf the Fed’s liquidity capacity.

For example, there are an estimated $600 trillion to $1.5 quadrillion in derivatives products worldwide at the moment. Global gross world product is approximately $79 trillion by comparison.

Contrary to what Bernanke and others who are so tightly involved in the system believe, this crisis was not caused by a lack of liquidity. Rather, it was caused by too much money sloshing around in some sort of unregulated mosh pit with inadequate supervision and inadequate regulatory oversight.

The real villain here is that excess liquidity is leveraged. This lets big banks buy derivatives for pennies on the dollar yet exposes them to hundreds of billions in market risk.

The sad reality is that Bernanke and his central banking buddies in ‘Feds’ around the world could print money until the end of time and they still wouldn’t be able to print enough to guarantee liquidity. Yet they will continue to try because that’s the only way they keep the illusion going.

It’s also the only way they keep a handle on their version of risk…to the system. And that brings us full circle.

Success by its very definition includes failure. People forget that the discipline of failure is integral to capitalism. When the Fed creates money out of thin air, the risk of failure does not exist. Without the risk of failure, the big banks know they can place one way bets and not worry about losses because they are literally ‘too big to fail’.

In fact, management and traders are paid to do exactly this. If the monstrous one-way bets pay off, they get up to 50% of the profits. If the bets go bad, the stockholders, the Federal Reserve, and now the public eat the losses.

So they have every incentive to act in their own interests while reinforcing incompetent management, improper risk taking and inefficient operations. Politicians and regulators are incentivized the same way, since the Fed also makes it possible for them to skirt the issue of responsibility.

The Fallacy of Free Money

Which brings me to the last sacred cow I want to barbeque today: interest rates.

The Fed spends a good deal of its time and our money promoting and maintaining low interest rates. It’s doing so on the assumption that low rates prompt everyone to put money to work by making savings less appealing. But ask Japan how much demand there was when money was free – the answer is next to none.

The trillion-dollar problem is that this economic assumption presumes the savings are there in the first place. In reality, America and other ‘Fed’ nations are flat broke. There is no savings pool to draw upon, which means the foregone assumption is a bust.

At some point, people who do not have cash cannot pay for the goods and services they need – no matter how much liquidity is in the system.

International capital markets actually exacerbate the problem because other governments and major trading firms purchase that very same excess liquidity which they, in turn, then begin using as collateral for their own expansion.

Congressman Ron Paul, a staunch Fed opponent, summed it up much more eloquently than I ever could in his book, End the Fed, noting that ‘those who suffer [rarely] see the connection between Federal Reserve monetary policy and the suffering that comes as a consequence of financing big government and big banking.’

Under the circumstances, is it any wonder that almost every currency in recorded history that is controlled by a central bank has failed or is failing?

The Federal Reserve

No. We do not need a Fed because dissolving it would:

  • Force any government that has one to live within its means;
  • Restore the appropriate level of risk to the global financial community; and,
  • Nullify the risks involuntarily forced upon the public in the name of political priorities.

As for how we dissolve this mess, that’s a subject for another time and another email.

Keith Fitz-Gerald
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Money Morning (USA)

From the Archives…

Why You Should Buy This Falling Stock Market
22-03-2013 – Kris Sayce

Stock Market Warning: Part II
21-03-2013 – Murray Dawes

New Developments on Whether You Can Get Your Mortgage Cancelled
20-03-2013 – Nick Hubble

Your Retirement or Your Mortgage?
19-03-2013 – Nick Hubble

Get Used to This Stock Market Action, It’s Set to Last…
18-03-2013 – Kris Sayce

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USDJPY remains in downtrend from 96.70

USDJPY remains in downtrend from 96.70, the rise from 93.53 is likely consolidation of the downtrend. Key resistance is now located at the upper line of the price channel on 4-hour chart. As long as the channel resistance holds, the downtrend could be expected to resume, and another fall to 92.00 – 93.00 area to complete to downward movement is possible. On the upside, a clear break above the channel resistance will indicate that the downtrend had completed, then the following upward movement could bring price to 100.00 zone.

usdjpy

Daily Forex Forecast

Hungary to mull further rate cuts if inflation moderate

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Hungary’s central bank, which earlier today cut its base rate for the eight time as expected, said it would consider cutting rates further as long as “medium-term inflationary pressures remain moderate and the uncertainty surrounding financial market developments diminishes.”
    The policy guidance by The National Bank of Hungary is similar to its stance in recent months, signaling it is likely to continue its easing cycle that was begun in August 2012. Since then, the central bank has cut rates by 200 basis points and this year rates have been cut by 75 basis points.
    The central bank said there is still a significant degree of spare capacity in Hungary’s economy and “inflationary pressure is likely to remain moderate in the medium term, and therefore the 3 percent target can be met with looser monetary conditions.”
    It said that recent fluctuations in Hungarian asset prices could not be “justified by fundamental forces” and this warranted a cautious approach to policy.
    In its latest inflation report, the central bank estimated consumer price inflation of 2.6 percent in 2013, down from 2012’s 5.7 percent and 2.8 percent in 2014. The central bank targets inflation of 3.0 percent.
    Hungary’s inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in February from 3.7 percent in January.
    Hungary’s Gross Domestic Product contracted by 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter, it’s fourth quarterly contraction in a row, for an annual shrinkage of 2.7 percent.
    The central bank forecast growth of 0.5 percent in 2013, up from 2012’s 1.7 percent contraction, and expansion of 1.7 percent in 2014.
    
    www.CentralBankNews.info

Morocco holds rate, inflation subdued but forecast raised

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Morocco’s central bank held its key rate steady at 3.0 percent, saying inflation remains subdued -despite a raised forecast – and in line with its target.
    The board of Bank Al-Maghrib said inflation is forecast to remain around 2.2 percent in 2013 and 1.6 percent in the second quarter of 2014, averaging 2.0 percent over the forecast horizon, “broadly in line with the objective of price stability in the medium term.”
     Morocco’s inflation rate eased to 2.2 percent in February from 2.6 percent in January and December while core inflation, which reflects the fundamental trend of price, remained below 1 percent, the Central Bank of Morocco said.
    In December the central bank estimated 2013 inflation of 1.7 percent and 1.5 percent in Q1 2014.
    Morocco’s central bank has held rates steady since March 2012 when it cut rates by 25 basis points.

    While international economic activity weak and uncertain, external inflationary pressures should largely remain absent, the bank said.
    Morocco’s Gross Domestic Product growth is estimated at 2.6 percent in the fourth quarter, and below 3.0 percent for the full 2012 year. Despite uncertainty surrounding growth in Morocco’s major trading partners, the central bank estimates GDP growth of 4-5 percent this year, mainly due to higher agricultural activity.
    This forecast is unchanged from December.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

   

Oanda Takes Mobile Forex Trading To The Next Level

–       Latest OANDA trading apps for iPhone, iPad and Android bring desktop functionality to mobile devices, including customizable charts, overlays and indicators, price alerts and more

–       OANDA CEO – “There are no longer any compromises when it comes to mobile”

TORONTO – MARCH 26, 2013 – OANDA, a global provider of innovative foreign exchange trading services, today announced a significant update to its OANDA fxTrade mobile applications for iPhone, iPad, and Android devices.

OANDA’s fxTrade mobile app allows users to quickly monitor forex market activity as well as manage positions, control risk, and monitor account status and profitability while on the go. The free app’s intuitive design makes the most of native iPhone, iPad, and Android capabilities to provide features that traders need to stay on top of the fast-moving forex market.

“We are excited to finally bring robust desktop trading functionality to the smartphone,” said Trevor Young, Senior Director of Product Management at OANDA. “In the past three years our clients have progressed from merely checking positions and prices with our mobile app to using it to plan and execute trades. As mobile continues to evolve as the go-to computing platform, OANDA will be at the forefront of mobile trading technology design with our commitment to provide the types of trading experiences our customers expect from a trusted forex innovator.”

Key features of this new version of OANDA’s fxTrade mobile app include:

·         Advanced charting functionality that allows users to overlay various technical indicators for enhanced price-data analysis

·         Customizable charts in a greater range of intervals (ranging from 5 seconds to 1 day)

·         Full visibility into price action from a single screen, with continuous display of current prices even when manipulating chart parameters

·         A sleek user interface that allows easier chart navigation, one-handed chart manipulation, scrolling trade history, and pinch-to-zoom capabilities

·         Streaming news feeds from top providers such as Dow Jones, Thomson Reuters, 4Cast, and UBS Analysis (iPhone and Android only)

·         Push notifications for limit orders, stop loss and take profit actions, margin notifications, and price alerts (price-alert notifications are not available on iPad)

Continuous improvement: an OANDA hallmark

With this latest application update, OANDA continues its track record of innovation in mobile trading. Today’s release is the result of more than 18 months of work from the OANDA mobile development team, and incorporates user feedback from OANDA customers globally. Mobile devices already account for 30 percent of logins and 15 percent of trades for OANDA clients, a number that has risen rapidly since the company introduced its first mobile trading app in 2010.

“There are no longer any compromises when it comes to mobile,” said OANDA CEO K Duker. “With this new version of our trading app, we’re providing our customers with what they want: a robust platform at their fingertips and a great trading experience, no matter where they are. We’ve seen a strong increase in downloads and use of OANDA’s native mobile app in the last 12 to 18 months, and today’s product keeps our clients at the forefront of this industry trend.”

The OANDA mobile apps for iPhone and iPad users are available for download in the App Store, or on the Google Play apps store for Android-based smartphones and tablets. These apps complement the OANDA MetaTrader 4 mobile applications that are available for iPhone and Android smartphones and tablets.

 

About OANDA

*********************

OANDA Corporation has transformed the business of foreign exchange through an innovative approach to forex trading. The company’s award-winning online trading platform, fxTrade, introduced a number of firsts to the marketplace, including immediate execution; instant settlement on trades; trades of any size between one unit and 10 million units; and interest calculated by the second. OANDA’s powerful, flexible fxTrade platform is also accessible via mobile applications for iPad, iPhone, and Android devices.

In 2012, OANDA was named “Best Forex Provider” by the Financial Times and by Investors Chronicle; “Best FX Broker” by Forex Magnates; and was recognized by Investment Trends Singapore as providing “Best Value for Money” and “Highest Overall Client Satisfaction”. OANDA was also the first online provider of comprehensive currency exchange information. Today, the company’s OANDA Rate® data are the benchmark rates for corporations, auditing firms, and global banks.

OANDA has six offices worldwide, in Chicago, London, Singapore, Tokyo, Toronto, and Zurich. OANDA is fully regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the U.S. National Futures Association (NFA), the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC), the UK Financial Services Authority (FSA), and the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA).

 

Hungary cuts base rate for eight time in a row to 5.0%

By www.CentralBankNews.info

    Hungary’s central bank cut its base rate by 25 basis points to 5.0 percent, it’s eight rate cut in a row, the National Bank of Hungary (MNB) said in a brief statement.
    The rate cut was widely expected and it was the first council meeting chaired by the central bank’s new president, Gyorgy Matolscy, former economy minister.
    The MNB has cut rates by 200 basis points since it embarked on its easing cycle in August 2012.
    Last month the central bank said it would consider cutting rates further if the outlook for inflation remains in line with its 3.0 percent target and the improvement in financial market sentiment is sustained.
    Hungary’s inflation rate eased to 2.8 percent in February from 3.7 percent in January
    Earlier today a spokesman for the bank told media that the bank would no longer hold press conferences after the monthly rate-setting meetings.
    Hungary’s Gross Domestic Product contracted by 0.9 percent in the fourth quarter, it’s fourth quarterly contraction in a row, for an annual shrinkage of 2.7 percent.

Central Bank News Link List – Mar 26, 2013: Cyprus banks remain closed to avert run on deposits

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Turkey holds key rate, but cuts overnight lending rate

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Turkey’s central bank kept its benchmark one-week repo rate steady at 5.5 percent but narrowed its interest rate corridor again by cutting the overnight lending rate, saying the recent increase in global uncertainties had lead to a slowdown in capital inflows.
    The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) cut the overnight lending rate, the ceiling of the interest rate corridor, by 100 basis points to 7.50 percent. The central bank, which started narrowing the corridor in September last year,  left the overnight borrowing rate, the floor of the rate corridor, unchanged at 4.50 percent.
    The central bank also cut the lending rate at the late liquidity window by 100 basis points to 10.50 percent but kept the borrowing rate steady at zero percent.
    Last month the CBRT cut both the overnight lending and borrowing rates by 25 basis points but tightened the reserve requirements to slow down the growth of credit from capital inflows that is putting upward pressure on the Turkish lira.
    The CBRT said domestic demand was recovering in a healthy manner and exports remained strong despite weak global growth.

     Given the uncertain global environment, the central bank said it would remain flexible in both directions and the amount of funding to markets would be adjusted upward or downward when necessary.
    In light of the slowdown in global demand and commodity prices, there is a reduced risk of inflation, the CBRT said, adding that it would closely monitor domestic demand and prices.
    Turkey’s inflation rate eased to 7.03 percent in February, down from 7.31 percent in January.

    The central bank targets annual inflation of 5.0 percent in 2013, the same as in 2012 when inflation averaged 6.2 percent, and has said it expects inflation to ease this year.
    Turkey’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by a slight 0.2 percent in the third quarter from the second for annual growth of 1.6 percent, down from a rate of 3.2 percent in the second quarter.
     The economy is estimated to have expanded by 2.5 percent last year, down from 8.5 percent in 2011. The central bank forecasts 2013 growth of 4 percent or higher.
    Turkey’s overnight rates have been coming down for the last decade. In 2002 the borrowing rate was 57 percent and the lending rate 62 percent, but in mid-2011 the CBRT raised the rates. 

    Last year the bank started cutting the lending rate from 12.50 percent while keeping the borrowing rate unchanged at 5.0 percent.
    In the first three months of this year, the CBRT has cut overnight lending rate by 150 basis points
and the overnight borrowing rate by 50 basis points.
    While narrowing and shifting the interest rate corridor downward last year, the CBRT kept the benchmark one-week repo rate steady until December when it was cut by 25 basis points, the first cut since August 2011.

    www.CentralBankNews.info