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Philippines open to big hikes to aid peso: new BSP chief

Incoming Philippine central bank Governor Felipe Medalla. (Photographer: Geric Cruz/Bloomberg)
Incoming Philippine central bank Governor Felipe Medalla. (Photographer: Geric Cruz/Bloomberg) (Bloomberg)

By Siegfrid Alegado

The Philippines central bank won’t shy away from larger interest-rate increases to prevent a steep peso fall from further fanning inflation, its incoming governor Felipe Medalla said.

“If we see that the exchange rate is overshooting too much, and that selling foreign exchange will not make the problem go away, we would clearly consider may be increasing policy rates by more than our planned 25 basis points,” he said in a virtual briefing with the international media on Wednesday.

The peso has weakened this quarter falling 6% against the dollar, as the US Federal Reserve embarked on aggressive rate hikes. A weaker currency adds to concerns about imported inflation in an economy that buys almost all its oil needs and with inflation hovering above the central bank’s 2%-4% target.

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Medalla, who’s currently a member of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s monetary board and is set to take over as governor on July 1, clarified that aggressive hikes by the BSP will depend on the exchange rate “overshooting” and stoking imported inflation. As it stands, there was no need for the Southeast Asian nation to otherwise match the Fed’s hikes like-for-like, he said.

Medalla had previously signaled a 25 basis-point rate increase at its August meeting, after having already raised borrowing costs by half a percentage point in two moves to 2.5%. Asked why the plan was for a gradual tightening, the incoming governor said raising interest rates have very little short-run effect on inflation, with imported oil as the main source of pressure.

Policymakers will balance managing inflation and helping the nation’s “nascent” economic recovery, he said on Wednesday.

The central bank prefers the peso to remain market-determined and only intervenes to smoothen movements that are “out of line,” Medalla said, adding that the nation has ample foreign exchange reserves.

© 2022 Bloomberg L.P.