S. Africa Inflation Drop Unlikely to Prompt Aggressive Rate Cuts

South Africa Inflation Drops Below Target First Time in 15 Years

South African inflation at the lowest level in almost 16 years may not be enough to push the central bank to cut interests by a big margin next week.

At 2.1% in May, inflation dropped below the central bank’s target band for the first time since 2005. The monetary policy committee had projected such a breach for the second and third quarters, and Governor Lesetja Kganyago said last month that the panel would only step in if it became a protracted event.

As the impact of the coronavirus and economic fallout of lockdown to curb its spread became clear, the MPC reduced the benchmark repurchase rate to the lowest since it was introduced in 1998. That included a move at an unscheduled meeting in April, where the vote was unanimous for a 100 basis-point cut. However, by May, two members favored a reduction of only 25 basis points and the result was half a percentage point of easing.

“We pencil in a 50 basis-point cut for now, but acknowledge that until more evidence of structural core price disinflation comes to the fore, the South African Reserve Bank may well go back to its usual incremental 25 basis points cuts from now on,” said Jeffrey Schultz, a senior economist at BNP Paribas South Africa.

The central bank sees the economy contracting by 7% in 2020 and forecasts an annualized drop in gross domestic product of 32.6% for the three months through June, which would be the deepest quarterly decline since at least 1990. The Reserve Bank expects inflation to peak at 5% in the second quarter of 2021. It will probably then drop back to below 4.5%, where the MPC prefers to anchor it, for most of 2022.

The May inflation data that’s in line with the central bank’s expectations is unlikely to change its assessment of interest rates, said Elize Kruger, an independent economist. The central bank’s quarterly projection model now forecasts a repurchase rate of 3.63% by the end of this year and 4.1% by the end of 2021. Still, its economic-growth outlook would have more bearing on the interest rate trajectory, Kruger said.

What Bloomberg’s Economist Says...

“They will likely hold next week and continue to monitor inflation outcomes. I still expect the SARB to cut by 50bps but only later in the year. Cuts bigger than that will be reflective of the SARB’s view of the extent of weakness in the economy driven by demand rather than supply.”

-- Boingotlo Gasealahwe, Africa Economist

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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