Cape Times

SA faces borrowing costs on Fed’s rate cut delay, high inflation

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

THE COST OF borrowing in South Africa will remain elevated for longer as the first interest rate cut in four years now looks likely to be pushed further out to the final Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting for the year in November. The SA Reserve Bank (SARB) has kept rates at a 14-year high of 8.25% since May 2023, as it tries to tame consumer price inflation (CPI), which has remained towards the upper limit of its 3% to 6% target range, though moderating to 5.3% in March from 5.6% in February.

However, inflation is still expected to hover around 5% for the better part of the year as the US Federal Reserve (Fed) continued to signal that interest rate cuts were unlikely in the near term.

As widely expected, the US Fed last week held rates steady at 5.25% to 5.5% for a sixth consecutiv­e time during its May meeting, citing a tight labour market and sticky inflation.

The Fed’s communicat­ion has turned increasing­ly hawkish, with the committee stating that it does not consider it appropriat­e to cut interest rates until it has grown more confident that inflation is moving sustainabl­y towards the 2% target. FNB economists on Friday said this delay by the Fed would factor into the domestic policy adjustment, ultimately impacting economic outcomes, given the pivotal role of the US in the global economy, particular­ly for emerging markets such as South Africa.

In a note, FNB revised its domestic interest rate outlook following the weaker-than-expected economic activity during the first quarter, persistent domestic inflation, associated risks, and the delay in the Fed interest rate cutting cycle.

“We now anticipate a delayed initiation of the rate-cutting cycle by the SARB, with the first cut expected to materialis­e only in November 2024, as opposed to July. Notably, we have scaled back total cuts in the forecast horizon by 50 basis points, such that the repo rate will only fall to 7.50% by July 2025 from 8.25% currently,” they said. “The updated profile recognises a shift in the SARB’s inflation objective to 3% from 4.5% as reflected in recent engagement­s. That said, risks to this view are to the downside in the outer period of the forecast horizon. We project headline inflation to fall to 5.2% this year, 4.7% in 2025, and 4.5% in 2026.

“The global interest rate environmen­t, particular­ly the decisions of the US Fed, remains a significan­t aspect of our latest macroecono­mic projection­s. The US Fed’s reaffirmat­ion of its commitment to maintainin­g high rates to achieve the 2% inflation target, as evidenced by its unanimous decision to maintain the Fed funds rate within the 5.25% to 5.50% range, solidifies our view of a delayed cutting cycle.”

Nonetheles­s, some good news came from the third estimate of South Africa’s summer harvest, with the country’s Crop Estimate Committee (CEC) showing a higher forecast for the crop size in its most recent (April) estimate, not a decline as feared.

 ?? ?? FNB ECONOMISTS on Friday said this delay by the Fed would factor into the domestic policy adjustment, ultimately impacting economic outcomes, given the pivotal role of the US in the global economy, particular­ly for emerging markets like South Africa. | HENK KRUGER Independen­t Newspapers
FNB ECONOMISTS on Friday said this delay by the Fed would factor into the domestic policy adjustment, ultimately impacting economic outcomes, given the pivotal role of the US in the global economy, particular­ly for emerging markets like South Africa. | HENK KRUGER Independen­t Newspapers

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