By Shaloo Shrivastava
BENGALURU (Reuters) – South Korea’s central bank will opt to go big again and hike rates by another half-point next week, pushing borrowing costs higher than earlier predicted to support a weakening won and dull its effect on inflation, a Reuters poll showed.
That change in forecasts comes in the wake of widening rate differentials with an aggressive U.S. Federal Reserve which has hinted it would keep rates higher for longer.
Already down over 15% this year, the Korean won was expected to drop another 1.6% by end-2022, a separate Reuters poll showed. That precipitous fall came despite the Bank of Korea (BOK) raising interest rates by 200 basis points since last August.
But expectations were for the BOK to stay the course and continue to hike interest rates over the coming quarters.
An overwhelming majority of 88% of economists, 23 of 26, in the Oct. 4-6 poll predicted the BOK to hike its base rate by 50 basis points to 3.00% at its Oct. 12 meeting. The remaining three expected a smaller rise of 25 basis points.
“Fending off FX pass-through onto CPI inflation will be the top priority for the Bank of Korea during the remaining period of the current hiking cycle,” noted Kathleen Oh, economist at Bank of America Securities.
“The central bank is now set to change its original course of baby-step hikes to a 50bp hike, moving with the mighty hawks at the Fed.”
The median forecast in the poll showed the base rate going to 3.25% by year-end and then peaking at 3.50% in the first quarter of 2023. That predicted top rate was higher than the 2.75% forecast in an August poll.
Nearly half of economists, 12 of 25, expected the base rate to reach 3.75% in Q1 of next year, suggesting the bias was toward borrowing rates climbing higher as inflation at 5.6% in September from the same month a year ago was far above the BOK’s target of 2.0%.
“A comforting pullback in inflation will take time, and the BOK has made clear that inflation will remain its top priority if it remains between 5-6%,” noted Krystal Tan, economist at ANZ.
The poll also showed inflation to average 5.2% and 3.0% this year and next, higher than the 5.0% and 2.7% predicted in a July poll.
South Korea’s economy was expected to grow 2.6% in 2022 and 1.9% in 2023 compared with 2.5% and 2.4% forecast in the previous survey.
(For other stories from the Reuters global long-term economic outlook polls package:)
(Reporting by Shaloo Shrivastava in Bengaluru; Polling by Devayani Sathyan and Anant Chandak; Editing by Matthew Lewis)