South Korea central bank unexpectedly raises rates as prices surge

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Inflation in South Korea is expected to hold at decade highs, threatening recovery from its pandemic slump.

PHOTO: AFP

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SEOUL (REUTERS) - South Korea's central bank raised its policy rate to the highest since August 2019 on Thursday (April 14) in an unexpected move, choosing not to wait for the formal appointment of a new governor before proceeding with its fight against surging inflation.
In its first-ever rate review held without a governor, the Bank of Korea's monetary policy board voted to raise the benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.50 per cent, an outcome only 11 of 29 economists foresaw in a Reuters poll.
The other 18 expected the bank to keep the base rate unchanged.
Inflation in South Korea is expected to hold at decade highs as Russia's invasion of Ukraine sends commodity prices soaring, threatening the recovery in Asia's fourth-largest economy from its pandemic slump.
On same day as South Korea's rate decision, Singapore tighened its monetary policy for the third time in six months and raised inflation forecasts. New Zealand on Wednesday delivered a larger-than-expected 50-basis point hike as other Asia-Pacific central banks shift their focus away from supporting growth to fighting surging inflation.
Analysts see South Korea's policy rate reaching 2 per cent by the end of this year.
"Inflation is so strong and given where the bond market is, a hike would be more appropriate now than later even in the absence of the governor," said Meritz Securities analyst Yoon Yeo-sam, who correctly forecast Thursday's rate hike.
Mr Rhee Chang-yong, South Korea's nominee to be the central bank's chief, is expected to start his four-year term after the necessary parliamentary hearing on April 19. Former governor Lee Ju-yeol's term ended in March.
The yield on the most liquid three-year Treasury bond exceeded 3.1 per cent this week to levels not seen since June 2013, as the prospect of faster United States interest rate hikes fuelled concerns about the ability of the global economy to weather higher financing costs.
The Federal Reserve raised the target band for its policy rate in March in the first upward shift since 2018, and analysts predict it will turn much more aggressive in tightening monetary policy to step up the fight against inflation.
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