Malaysia Increases Interest Rate as Recession Ends
March 04, 2010, 6:33 AM EST
By Shamim Adam
March 4 (Bloomberg) -- Malaysia’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time in almost four years, saying record-low borrowing costs were no longer warranted as the economy emerges from recession and inflation accelerates.
The ringgit rose as economists predicted central bank Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz will continue to raise rates. Asia is leading the global recovery from the worst recession since World War II and Australia, China, India and Vietnam have tightened monetary policy to fight inflation and avert asset bubbles.
“We should expect a few more upward adjustments,” Suhaimi Ilias, chief economist at Maybank Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur, said after the decision. “The central bank has the luxury of time to raise rates gradually. Other central banks will look at domestic conditions before making their moves.”
Indonesia’s central bank left its reference rate at a record-low 6.5 percent today. Australia this week raised its benchmark for the fourth time in five meetings, by 0.25 percentage point to 4 percent.
“The overnight policy rate was reduced to historic lows in early 2009 as a key measure to avert a severe and fundamental economic downturn,” the central bank said in a statement today. “These conditions no longer prevail. The domestic economy has since improved significantly and is now on a path of recovery.”
Ringgit Rises
Malaysia’s ringgit rose to 3.3585 a dollar after the rate decision, the strongest level in six weeks. The currency has gained 1.5 percent this year, making it the best performer after the Thai baht in Asia outside Japan.
“The Monetary Policy Committee decided to adjust the overnight policy rate towards normalizing monetary conditions and preventing the risk of financial imbalances that could undermine the economic recovery process,” the central bank said. “The stance of monetary policy continues to remain accommodative and supportive of economic growth.”
Asian policy makers risk creating asset bubbles and fueling inflation by keeping interest rates “too low for too long” in their attempts to boost domestic demand, Standard & Poor’s said in a report yesterday.
Malaysia’s Zeti has said in the past month that any increase in rates should be viewed as a “normalization” and not a “tightening.”
Exports Climb
Southeast Asia’s third-largest economy emerged from its first recession in a decade last quarter, and Prime Minister Najib Razak has said he expects this year’s expansion to beat the official growth forecast of as much as 3 percent.
Malaysia’s exports may climb this year at twice the 3.5 percent pace predicted earlier as the global recovery revives overseas sales of Sime Darby Bhd.’s palm oil and Intel Corp.’s computer chips, International Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Mohamed said this week.
Before today, the benchmark rate was at its lowest level since it was introduced in April 2004, and had been unchanged since February last year. Malaysia’s borrowing costs are among the lowest in Asia, below the Philippines’ 4 percent benchmark.
The benchmark FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index fell 0.2 percent at the close today.
Attract Capital
“A rate increase may be good to attract some capital inflows,” Geoffrey Ng, who manages $1.2 billion of assets as chief executive officer at HLG Asset Management Sdn. in Kuala Lumpur, said before the decision. “The foreign-exchange reserves have been rather flattish in recent months and the country has been facing quite a bit of capital outflows. On the flipside, the risk is that the equity market will take it in a wrong way.”
Malaysia’s consumer prices rose for a second month in January, climbing 1.3 percent from a year earlier.
Inflation may accelerate later this year as the government studies a revamp of its fuel subsidy. Malaysia aims to come up with a new fuel-subsidy system before presenting the nation’s annual budget in October, Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob said today.
Prices will increase “gradually” this year and inflation should remain “moderate,” the central bank said. It’s forecast for inflation takes into account possible adjustments in “administered prices” and rising global commodity and food prices, it said.
Bank Negara policy makers next meet to review interest rates on May 13. The central bank kept the statutory reserve requirement unchanged today. The measure determines the amount of money lenders need to set aside as reserves.
--With assistance from Michael Munoz in Hong Kong and David Yong in Singapore. Editors: Stephanie Phang, Lily Nonomiya
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-03-04/malaysia-increases-interest-rate-as-recession-ends-update1-.html
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