By CentralBankNews.info
Trinidad and Tobago’s central bank raised its benchmark repurchase rate for the fourth consecutive time by 25 basis points to 3.75 percent, citing recent forward guidance by the U.S. Federal Reserve, the potential for higher inflation in the medium term and a relatively positive outlook for economic growth in 2015.
The Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago, which has now raised its rate by 100 basis points since September 2014, added that it would continue to absorb excess liquidity to strengthen the impact of higher interests throughout the financial system.
On March 18 the Fed dropped the word “patient” from its forward guidance but suggested that no rate hikes would occur in April and June. Financial markets now expect the first increase in the Fed funds rate between July and September, the central bank said.
The normalization of U.S. monetary policy has implications for portfolio capital outflows and demand for foreign exchange in Trinidad and Tobago as returns on U.S. dollar assets remain more attractive than TT dollar assets, the bank said, adding that higher domestic interest rates are necessary to enhance the return on domestic assets to curb portfolio capital movements abroad.
By mid-March, the TT$-US$ differential on benchmark 10-year Treasuries had narrowed to 64 basis points from 87 points at the end of January.
Inflation in Trinidad and Tobago slowed for the third consecutive month to just over 6 percent in February from 9 percent in November due to higher food supply, but the central bank cautioned that this slowdown may be short lived as inflation pressures are expected to pick up in the rest of 2015.
Among the reasons for these pressures are robust consumer credit, close to full capacity in the domestic economy, expansionary fiscal stimulus and further positive momentum in the non-energy sector even as the energy sector was marred by maintenance work.
The Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago issued the following statement:
“At its March 2015 meeting, Central Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) agreed to raise the ‘Repo’ rate for a fourth consecutive time by 25 basis points to 3 3⁄4 per cent. The MPC also agreed to continue with an aggressive programme to absorb excess liquidity so as to strengthen the impact higher interest rates are expected to have throughout the financial system. The MPC based its decision on three factors. The first factor was recent forward guidance from the US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on the medium-term path of US monetary policy. The second factor was the potential for higher domestic inflation in the medium term. The third factor the MPC deliberated upon was the relatively positive growth outlook for 2015.
The next Monetary Policy Announcement is scheduled for May 29th 2015.”
www.CentralBankNews.info