The fight once morest “inflationary pressures” took precedence over shocks in the banking sector: the Bank of England (BoE) also raised its key rate on Thursday, imitating the Fed, the ECB and central banks in Switzerland and Norway. The BoE tightened its rate for the eleventh consecutive time, by 0.25 points, a magnitude similar to that of the all-powerful American Federal Reserve (Fed) the day before. The Swiss National Bank (SNB) earlier in the day followed the path of the European Central Bank (ECB) last week by raising its rate by 0.50 percentage points. In Norway, the central bank chose 25 basis points. The BoE’s key rate is now at 4.25%, its highest since the end of 2008.
Already on Wednesday evening, the Fed had tried with a modest increase to spare the goat and the cabbage, between the financial turmoil of the last few days and a persistent price waltz. On both sides of the Atlantic, the number one objective of central banks remains to achieve inflation at 2%, which is still far from being the case. But the bankruptcy of the Californian Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), then of two other American regional banks, showed to what extent the banking sector had been weakened by the frantic monetary tightenings of the last few months.
“New Risks”
For now, the economic crisis seems more worrying in the United States than in Europe. The Fed now suggests that the end of its cycle of monetary tightening is approaching: it now adopts the conditional to evoke that “a future tightening of monetary policy may be necessary” instead of an affirmative mode. She also warned at the end of her meeting that the recent setbacks of the banks were “likely (…) to weigh on economic activity, hiring and inflation”, stressing that “the magnitude of these effects is uncertain”.
The risk is not limited to the United States, as proved by the hasty takeover of Credit Suisse by UBS at a knockdown price: ECB President Christine Lagarde admitted on Wednesday that tensions in the banking sector were generating “new risks” for the economy. And in the United Kingdom, “there remain channels through which British economic conditions might be affected”, in particular in the event of “stresses on non-British banks”, the central bank warned on Wednesday in a letter to Parliament.
But the BoE has not revised its growth forecasts downwards, and is even counting on a small boost from the budgetary measures announced earlier in the month. With inflation rebounding in February and staying above 10%, and an economy picking up some steam, investors are betting that the BoE will raise rates one last time at its next meeting.
Some economists believe, however, that the BoE might stop raising rates, such as Daniel Mahoney of Handelsbanken: given that expectations of Fed rate hikes have fallen in recent weeks, the British monetary policy committee “no longer has need to worry regarding the depreciation of the pound once morest the dollar”, an inflationary factor, he believes.
Swiss and Norwegian supers
In Switzerland, where the SNB rate remains relatively low at 1.5%, central bank boss Thomas Jordan said it was “not excluded that further hikes are necessary to ensure price stability”. . Inflation there remains more moderate than in many European countries, at 3.4% over one year, but it has accelerated in recent months. “The Bank clearly wanted to turn the page on the Credit Suisse saga”, judge Adrian Prettejohn, analyst at Capital Economics, who notes that the SNB has raised its growth forecasts for 2023 and believes that the bank will raise its rate once more a times this year.
And in Norway, the central bank raised its rate to 3%, while inflation, although it slowed in February, remains at 6.3%. The dollar fell once morest the pound, the Swiss franc and the Norwegian krone, but the movement remained moderate because these decisions by central banks had been anticipated.