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Mexico Cuts Rate for First Time in 5 Years as Economy Staggers

Led by Governor Alejandro Diaz de Leon, the bank’s board voted 4 to 1 to lower rates a quarter point to 8% from a ten-year high.

Mexico Cuts Rate for First Time in 5 Years as Economy Staggers
Led by Governor Alejandro Diaz de Leon, the bank’s board voted 4 to 1 to lower rates a quarter point to 8% from a ten-year high. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

Mexico’s central bank reduced borrowing costs for the first time in five years after inflation slowed, the economy faltered and the U.S. cut its own rate. The peso weakened before paring declines to post gains.

Led by Governor Alejandro Diaz de Leon, the bank’s board voted 4 to 1 to lower rates a quarter point to 8% from a ten-year high. The decision was forecast by 14 of 31 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Sixteen saw rates on hold, while one analyst predicted a half-point reduction.

Mexico Cuts Rate for First Time in 5 Years as Economy Staggers

Investors were also split on which way the central bank would swing after the five-member board showed divisions in its previous meeting in June. Two members had expressed a dovish stance, while the majority raised concern about high core inflation and a deeply uncertain global environment. Then, last month, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador broke from his strict non-interventionist stance to tell Bloomberg he’d like to see a rate cut.

“I thought they would give more guidance, but they just cut and kept the door open for any move,” said Marco Oviedo, chief Latin America economist for Barclays, who had predicted rates on hold. “So my best guess now is that they will follow the Fed.

Slowing inflation, economic slack and yield-curve performance were among reasons for easing, the central bank said in the statement accompanying its decision. But policymakers insisted they would remain prudent and act swiftly if risks to reaching the inflation target appear. The board added that uncertainty that could impact inflation persists while the growth outlook remained negative.

At 2:12 p.m. in Mexico City, the peso traded at 19.6038 per dollar from 19.6756 yesterday. Markets aren’t pricing in another cut until November, according to Bloomberg’s implied probability model.

Investors were leaning slightly toward easing on Thursdsay as forecast by interest-rate swaps. Their argument went: the 3.78% inflation rate is the lowest in 30 months, the economy narrowly dodged recession in the second quarter and in addition to the Fed, Brazil and Chile just lowered borrowing costs.

Naysayers warned that 3.82% core inflation remains high, trade war risks with the U.S. abound and Argentina’s assets just fell off a cliff after a primary election stoked concern South America’s second-biggest economy will return to populist policies.

‘Vigilant,’ ‘Trajectory’

Manuel Sanchez, a former central bank board member known for his hawkish views, had said before the decision that Banxico hadn’t properly prepared the market for lower borrowing costs this time around and could lose credibility that’s key to controlling inflation if it eases too soon.

Credit Suisse economist Alonso Cervera, who predicted a rate reduction for today, said more easing is likely on the way if the peso doesn’t weaken sharply. “I still think they will continue to cut if markets allow them,” he said.

Fitch Ratings agreed: “We still think Banxico will stay vigilant given domestic policy risks and the potential for risk aversion to affect the exchange rate,” wrote Charles Seville, co-head of Latin America sovereigns at Fitch Ratings. “But depending on the trajectory of Fed rates, the door may be open to further rate cuts.”

--With assistance from Rafael Gayol.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nacha Cattan in Mexico City at ncattan@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Juan Pablo Spinetto at jspinetto@bloomberg.net, ;Walter Brandimarte at wbrandimarte@bloomberg.net, Robert Jameson

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