Singapore tightens monetary policy

Singapore tightens monetary policy

Workers monitor production of wafer chips at the UTAC plant in Singapore on Feb 8 this year. (Reuters photo)
Workers monitor production of wafer chips at the UTAC plant in Singapore on Feb 8 this year. (Reuters photo)

SINGAPORE: The central bank tightened monetary policy for a second time this year, encouraged by steady economic growth despite worsening US-China trade tensions.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, which uses the exchange rate as its main policy tool, raised the slope of its currency band slightly, according to a statement on its website Friday. That implies it will seek an appreciation in the currency. Just over half of the 21 economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted the move, with the rest expecting no change.

The Singapore dollar gained 0.2% to 1.3742 against the US currency on Friday morning.

Led by the US Federal Reserve, global central banks are moving away from the ultra-easy policy of recent years, encouraged by solid growth and a slow pick-up in inflation. In trade-reliant Singapore, growth is seen moderating from last year’s 3.6%, yet still at a healthy pace of 2.5% to 3.5%.

A separate report on Friday showed gross domestic product grew an annualised4.7% in the third quarter from the previous three months, compared with a median estimate of 5% in a Bloomberg survey. The economy expanded at a 2.6% year-on-year rate in the three months through September, beating the median projection for 2.4%.

Demand for electronics, biomedical manufacturing and transport engineering was credited for the pickup in the manufacturing sector, which grew 7.6% from the previous quarter after a 2.9% gain previously. Construction increased 1.7% from the second quarter.

While global economic risks have risen on the back of the US-China trade conflict, there’s no reason to "overreact," MAS Managing Director Ravi Menon said in an interview this week. The global economy has "underlying resilience," he said.

The MAS repeated the word "resilient" in the statement to describe global growth in the face of trade tensions. In April, the central bankers flagged "significant consequences for global trade" if US-China trade tensions were to escalate from that time. Since then, the two governments have engaged in three rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs.

"It’s a risk to the downside, certainly something they’ll continue to monitor," said Khoon Goh, the head of research at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Singapore, who correctly predicted the MAS would tighten policy. "But unless there’s more concrete evidence that activity is still coming off, they’ll continue to treat it as a risk rather than something to factor into the baseline or to factor into their policy decision."

Singapore’s economic growth, meanwhile, was judged to be running "slightly above potential" and expected to expand at a "slower but steady pace" for the remainder of 2018 and into next year, according to the statement.

The MAS guides the local dollar against a basket of its counterparts and adjusts the pace of its appreciation or depreciation by changing the slope, width and centre of a currency band. It doesn’t disclose details on the basket, or the band or the pace of appreciation or depreciation.

Economies across Asia have been tightening this year. After an early move by Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines have raised interest rates aggressively to curb currency weakness. India raised rates twice since June but kept them unchanged last week.

"They see building domestic price pressures, which is a key reason" to tighten, Goh said of the MAS. They will continue to tighten next year if growth and inflation evolve as expected, he said. "This is definitely not the end of it."

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