By CentralBankNews.info
Switzerland’s central bank left its expansionary monetary policy in place, including the deposit rate at minus 0.75 percent, repeating that it still considers the Swiss franc to be “significantly overvalued” and it will remain active in foreign exchange markets as needed.
The Swiss National Bank (SNB), which shocked financial markets on Jan. 15 by abolishing its cap on the franc’s exchange rate to the euro, said its latest forecast for inflation differed little from the September forecast with 2015 inflation seen averaging minus 1.1 percent compared with minus 1.2 percent.
In November Switzerland’s consumer price inflation was steady at minus 1.4 percent from October.
For 2016 inflation is expected to rise slightly to minus 0.5 percent, unchanged from the previous forecast, while inflation in 2017 is seen at 0.3 percent, down from 0.4 percent due to a slight deterioration in the outlook for the global economy.
The Swiss franc has been largely steady against the euro in recent months and was trading at 1.08 to the euro today, up 11 percent since the start of this year when the cap of 1.20 francs per euro was in place.
But against the dollar, the Swiss franc has been more volatile, hitting 1.03 earlier this month compared with 0.86 just after the exchange rate peg was scrapped. Today it was trading at 0.98 to the dollar, up 3 percent on the year.
The Swiss National Bank issued the following statement:
The past few months have seen mortgage volumes and prices for owner-occupied residential real estate grow roughly in line with fundamentals. Imbalances on these markets have therefore remained largely unchanged. The SNB will continue to monitor developments on the mortgage and real estate markets closely. Accordingly, it will regularly reassess the need for an adjustment of the countercyclical capital buffer.”
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