By CentralBankNews.info
Switzerland’s central bank maintained its negative interest rates and confirmed that it still considers the Swiss franc to be “significantly overvalued” and it will remain active in the foreign exchange market to make Swiss franc investments less attractive and thus ease pressure on the currency.
The Swiss National Bank (SNB), which stunned foreign exchange markets in January 2015 by scrapping an upper limit on the exchange rate of the franc, left its interest rate on sight deposits at the central bank at minus 0.75 percent along with the benchmark target range for 3-month Libor between minus 1.25 percent and minus 0.25 percent.
After the SNB abolished the 1.20 franc cap against the euro, the franc jumped sharply but has remained steady. The franc was trading at 1.07 to the euro today, slightly up from 1.08 at the start of the year.
Compared with its last policy decision in September, the SNB said it had revised slightly downwards its inflation forecast, reflecting lower data in October and November.
For 2016 the SNB still sees inflation averaging minus 0.4 percent while the forecast for 2017 was trimmed to 0.1 percent from 0.2 percent. For 2018 inflation is seen averaging 0.5 percent, down from the September forecast of 0.6 percent.
Switzerland’s inflation rate was minus 0.3 percent in November, the 25th month in a row of deflation.
Switzerland’s economy grew by an annual rate of 1.3 percent in the third quarter, down from 2.0 percent in the second quarter, and the SNB said data pointed to continued moderate growth that is in line with its forecast for 1.5 percent this year.
“The outlook for the coming year is cautiously optimistic,” the SNB said, forecasting growth of roughly 1.5 percent.
The Swiss National Bank issued the following statement:
Over the last six months, growth on the mortgage and real estate markets has remained fairly constant at a relatively low level. At the same time, imbalances on these markets have decreased slightly overall due to developments in fundamentals. However, imbalances are still at a similarly high level as in 2014, when the sectoral countercyclical capital buffer was set at 2%. The SNB will continue to monitor developments on these markets closely, and will regularly reassess the need for an adjustment of the countercyclical capital buffer.”
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