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Economists take a closer look at MAS's surprise move to tighten its monetary policy stance

The MAS surprised with its decision to tighten its monetary policy stance earlier today.

As the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) revealed flash estimates for Singapore’s GDP for the 2Q2022 on July 14, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) announced its plan to further tighten its monetary policy stance on the same day.

The central bank will re-centre the mid-point of the Singapore dollar nominal effective exchange rate (S$NEER) policy band up to its prevailing level. There will be no change to the slope and width of the band.

The MAS also upgraded its headline and core CPI forecasts in addition to taking a further calibrated step to lean against price pressures.

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OCBC keeps GDP and inflation estimates unchanged

“Today’s off-cycle move to arrest any inflation expectations shift early clearly signifies some policy resolve to tamp down imported inflation and likely puts the S$NEER positioning at a more comfortable level for the near-term,” says Selena Ling, chief economist & head treasury research & strategy at OCBC Bank.

On MTI’s flash GDP estimates for the 2Q2022, Ling says a recession is “not on the cards” for Singapore’s economy at this point despite the external headwinds.

The advance 2Q2022 GDP growth estimates stood lower than the estimates of the street’s 5.4% y-o-y forecast as well as Ling’s forecast of a 5.3% growth y-o-y.

“Potential recession worries in the US and Eurozone (partly due to the current energy crisis) and hard landing concerns for China are starting to weigh on business and consumer confidence at this juncture, especially amidst the aggressive frontloading of monetary policy tightening by major central banks like the US Federal Reserve,” she notes.

“Even if a recession does not actually materialise for these major trading partners, a slowing external growth momentum will still weigh on Singapore’s trade-related sectors for the next six months and our GDP growth is tipped to moderate further into 2023, likely to around or even below the 3% y-o-y handle,” she adds.

To this end, Ling has kept her GDP growth forecast for 2022 at 3.5% to 4.0% y-o-y. Her headline and core CPI estimates are also unchanged at 5.6% and 4.1% respective.

Looking ahead, Ling sees the outlook for 2023 remaining “highly uncertain”.

This is because “much would depend on whether the global tide of aggressive monetary policy tightening subsides if the global economy gives way and inflation prints stabilise,” she says. “However, many central bankers have pivoted to indicate that inflation will remain structurally higher beyond the short-term, hence their obsession with inflationary expectations becoming entrenched and the need to frontload more aggressive tightening.”

To the analyst, the inflation-growth nexus remains “very dynamic”; the world will have to watch for whether global commodity prices stabilise further, as well as the US Fed’s decision to hike 75 or 100 basis points (bps) at the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on July 27.

The potential tightening of the local labour market is also another factor in terms of where the inflation-growth nexus heads to next.

In her report, Ling further questions the need for other policy tools to achieve additional targeted help for vulnerable Singaporeans to cope with the cost-of-living issues beyond the recently announced $1.5 billion package.

“Second, would there be any policy response to the continued buoyancy in asset prices in Singapore including COE premiums and the private residential property market?” mulls the economist.

Maybank Securities keeps GDP estimates but raises inflation forecasts

Maybank Securities economists Chua Hak Bin and Lee Ju Ye are keeping their GDP growth forecast for 2022 at 2.8%. Unlike their peers, the economists deem MTI’s flash estimates as above their estimate of 4%.

The higher-than-expected GDP was due to better-than-expected performance in the manufacturing and services sectors.

However, they see the MTI as likely to downgrade its GDP growth forecast to the lower range of 3%-4% (from 3%-5%) when the final 2Q GDP estimate is released.

While the economists are expecting the republic to see a 4.4% y-o-y expansion in its 1H2022 GDP, they foresee a steep deceleration in growth to around +1.4% in the second half of the year.

“This will be on the back of a sharp slowdown in global growth and tightening monetary conditions,” they write.

The analysts also see the US Fed as “likely” to hike rates by 75 or 100 bps at its upcoming meeting following the 9.1% surge in inflation in June.

In line with MAS’s guidance, Chua and Lee are raising their inflation forecasts for 2022 with headline CPI to average 5.5% in 2022 from 5.2% previously. The economists’ core CPI estimate is also raised to 3.5% from 3.2% previously.

“We expect inflation to peak in the third quarter, at around +4% for core CPI and +6% for headline CPI,” they write.

“Falling commodity prices and slowing global growth will help cool external inflationary pressures by the fourth quarter. Global food prices are showing signs of easing, with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Food Price Index falling to a four-month low in June,” they add.

“Oil prices are some 18% down from their peak in end May. Domestically, however, a tight labour market and the increase in wages for lower-income workers (introduction of the local qualifying wages and expansion of the progressive wage model to the retail sector in September) will likely keep wage cost pressures firm,” they continue. “Wage growth is expected to stay elevated following the +7.8% print in 1Q (vs. +3.6% in 2021).”

To this end, Maybank’s Chua and Lee foresee the MAS to maintain the “current tighter stance” at the October meeting, “unless inflation surprises on the upside yet again”.

“Our model suggests that the S$NEER is at about +0.7% above the mid-point of the new re-centred band, with considerable room left for further appreciation,” they write.

In 2023, the economists have lowered their GDP growth forecast to 1.5% from 2.5% previously.

“Global growth will likely slow significantly as major trading partners tighten monetary policy aggressively in response to elevated inflation, which will dampen consumer and investment spending,” they write.

Balance of probabilities tilted in favour of 100 bps hike in July; further slope steepening remains for MAS: Mizuho

Vishnu Varathan, Mizuho Bank’s head, economics & strategy, Asia & Oceania treasury department, says that the July FOMC is more likely to see a 100 bps hike.

In his report, Varathan notes that markets are now betting on a 75 bps or 100 bps hike in the upcoming meeting, even if Fed Chair Jerome Powell had qualified previously that 75 bps hikes should not be seen as a common occurrence.

To be sure, markets are pricing almost 65% odds for a 100 bps hike in July, says Varathan.

“This however is an intensification of hawkish bets, not an outright surprise,” he writes.

“Whereas for a hawkish surprise proper, we turn to the MAS that is a ‘step’ ahead,” he continues, referring to MAS’s surprise move to re-centre the S$NEER higher to prevailing levels.

“What this does is to immediately lift the policy band mid-point to prevailing S$NEER levels at in the upper half (we estimate +120-150bp above the mid-point since June),” says Varathan. “S$NEER jump to maintain a good part of pre-existing traction translates into immediate S$NEER jump of [around] 100-150 bps and corresponding SGD strength (USD/SGD slipping from above mid-1.40 to mid-1.39”.

On MAS’s decision, Varathan attributes it to the “significant upward revisions” to inflation that was a “dead giveaway in conveying the pressing and broadening step-up in price shocks”.

“[This is as] upstream price shocks have cascaded down more forcefully, pervading across a broad swath of imported goods,” he writes.

“Taken alongside re-opening demand sustenance/lift, the MAS probably saw fit to front-load this step appreciation to lean against higher and more persistent peaks in inflation,” he continues. “We think a further slope steepening remains on the table for October even as the MAS carefully assesses global recession risks and the delicate balance of risks.”

ING not surprised to see another off-cycle tightening by the MAS

MAS’s decision to tighten its policy ahead of the scheduled October meeting came as no surprise to ING’s senior economist, Nicholas Mapa.

“We were not all that surprised to see another off-cycle tightening by the MAS as short-end rates have clearly signalled an intention to keep the currency on the stronger side,” he writes. “But we had expected the adjustment to happen after an inflation data release.”

With forecasts pointing to even higher inflation prints, Mapa, like Mizuho’s Varathan, is expecting to see further action taken by the MAS at its October meeting.

“The SGD will be supported by today’s policy tightening, but with overall sentiment remaining pressured, immediate benefits may be hard to spot,” he says.

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