Research Houses Revise Their View After BNM Paused Its OPR Stance

Bank Negara Malaysia’s Monetary Policy Committee maintained the overnight policy rate (OPR) at 2.75%, matching house and market expectations

Its reason for the decision is to “continue to assess the impact of the cumulative OPR adjustments, given the lag effects of monetary policy on the economy.” Policy statement: it emphasised on the positive development of China’s reopening,
better-than-expected growth in major economies, and upside risk to the domestic growth outlook amid downside risks

Global: The MPC is positive on China’s reopening, while growth outturns in major economies amid strong domestic demand.
However, the MPC reiterates downside risks to the growth outlook: “an escalation of geopolitical tensions, higher-thananticipated inflation outturns, and a sharp tightening in financial market conditions.”

Domestic economy: Following strong GDP growth of 8.7% in 2022, the MPC expects growth to moderate in 2023, surrounded by a slower global economy and downside risk associated with global developments. For reference, the Ministry of Finance recently revised the GDP growth target to 4.5% from 4.0% – 5.0% announced by the previous administration. This is likely to be supported by resilient domestic demand, increased tourist arrivals, the progress of infrastructure projects and new projects under the revised Budget 2023. In comparison, we project GDP growth of 4.7% versus consensus’ 4.0%.

Inflation: The MPC expects headline and core inflation to moderate in 2023 (KIBB: 2.5%; 2022: 3.3%). Nevertheless, BNM added that “the balance of risk to the inflation outlook is tilted to the upside and continues to be highly subject to any changes to domestic policy on subsidies and price controls, as well as global commodity price developments.” This invariably supports the house’s view, as the government may implement targeted subsidies in the 2H23. However, Kenanaga said it believes the impact on inflation would not be severe as the government will provide measures to minimise the adverse effect.

BNM OPR outlook: may signal a longer-than-expected pause on policy direction. Following a pause in January and March MPC meetings, the research house believes there is a possibility that BNM’s monetary policy would now shift into a long pause mode. This view is further backed by the MPC’s primary aim to “calibrate the monetary policy settings that balance the risks to domestic inflation and sustainable growth,” and that “further normalisation to the degree of monetary policy accommodation would be informed by the evolving conditions and their implications to the domestic inflation and growth outlook.”

Given that growth and inflation outlook are expected to moderate this year amid downside risk from the external front, we foresee a small probability that BNM will resume its rate hike in the near term. Therefore, barring unforeseen external and domestic shocks on growth and inflation outlook, Kenanga expects the OPR to remain unchanged at 2.75% for the rest of the year

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