BNM cuts OPR by 50bhps to 2%

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 25-02-2009

Tagged Under : , , , ,

Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) on 24th February 2009 cuts the Overnight Policy Rate (OPR) by 50 basis points (bps) to 2% due to rising concern about the country’s economic growth.

BNM also cuts its statutory reserve requirement by 100bps to 1% and said measures would be introduced to ensure continuous access to credit. The last cut was at 75bps in January.

Related Posts:

Malaysia Rates Remain For Now

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 11-02-2009

Tagged Under : , ,

bank-negara

We reported recently that Bank Negara cuts the Overnight Policy Rate (OPR) to 2.5%.  Below is the latest update reported.

Bank Negara is not looking to lower its key policy rate unless there are further developments abroad that will make it necessary, its Governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said.

“We’ve frontloaded monetary measures because of the lag effect,” she told reporters Wednesday on the second day of the Bank Negara High Level Conference 2009.

The central bank had cut its key policy rate – the overnight policy rate (OPR) – by 25 basis points last November and by another 75 basis points to 2.5% at the end of last month. At the same time the OPR was cut in January, the statutory reserve requirement was also reduced by 150 basis points to 2.0%.

In her opening remarks at the Bank Negara High Level Conference 2009 on Tuesday Zeti said that the global financial crisis has exposed the vulnerabilities of the international financial architecture and there is a need for renewed thinking to reform the global financial system, said Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz.

“Today’s conference takes place at a time when we need to reflect on the many issues that are emerging from the current global financial and economic crisis and the new challenges and lessons it brings to central banks,” Zeti said in her opening remarks Tuesday.
Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz (left) shaking hands with the People’s Bank of China governor Dr Zhou Xianchuan at the Bank Negara High Level Conference 2009 on Tuesday

“The international dimension of these changes calls for an outcome in which the global financial system is less prone to disruption and failures and in which economic progress is a shared prosperity among nations.”

Zeti said the current crisis presented the opportunity to re-evaluate, promote and embrace sustainable long-term solutions, adding that globalisation had a deep impact on the way modern economies function.

“The benefits of globalisation have accrued to diverse communities and regions but it has also brought with it significant risks,” she said, noting how the financial crisis had turned into an economic crisis, with repercussions now being felt on a global scale.

The Bank Negara event, themed “Central Banking in the 21st Century: Implications of Economics and Financial Globalisation,” was held in conjunction with the Malaysian central bank’s 50th anniversary.

Central bank representatives from over 50 countries are attending the two-day conference.

China’s central bank governor Dr Zhou Xiaochuan in his keynote address said while the republic was less impacted by the global economic crisis than the West, it would not be insulated.

He said China may use foreign exchange policy and interest rates to reduce the amount people saved and help boost consumption.

“We need a comprehensive package to help lower savings rate, including exchange and interest rates,” he said, adding that there was a need to change consumption spending.

“China needs to cut savings and boost spending,” he said, adding that traditionally Asians tended to save more than people in the West.

Zhou said China needed to emphasise on increasing internal demand or domestic consumption, especially in the rural areas.

To mitigate the downturn, he said China also needed to further develop its financial and capital markets.

Related Posts:

Malaysia Central Bank cuts OPR to 2.5% to boost growth

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 22-01-2009

Tagged Under : , , ,

Malaysia Central Bank (Bank Negara) has slashed its overnight policy rate (OPR) by 75 basis points to 2.5%, its single largest cut since the OPR was introduced in April 2004, outlining its growing concern on economic growth.

The ceiling and floor rates of the corridor for the OPR were correspondingly reduced to 2.75% and 2.25% respectively while the statutory reserve requirement (SRR) was also reduced from 3.5% to 2%, effective Feb 1, the central bank said.

“With the heightened downside risks to growth, the magnitude of the reductions in the OPR and the SRR is aimed to be pre-emptive in providing a more supportive monetary environment for the domestic economy,” Bank Negara said in a statement yesterday.

Bank Negara last reduced the OPR in November by 25 basis points to 3.25%, its first cut since May 2006.

The sharper deterioration of the global economy is expected to have a greater impact on the Malaysian economy with the large decline in external demand already seen.

“These developments have also affected labour market conditions. Under these circumstances, the urgent implementation of policy measures will be key towards ensuring the Malaysian economy continues to experience positive growth in 2009,” Bank Negara said.

Inflation continued to decelerate to 4.4% in December 2008, a seven-month low from 5.7% the month before, due largely to lower fuel prices.

The deceleration is expected to continue in line with the weaker demand conditions and lower imported inflation.

Lower inflation essentially allows policy-makers the flexibility to lower rates.

Aseambankers chief economist Suhaimi Illias said the pace of the deterioration on the global front was creating the urgency for the central bank to act aggressively and that he did not expect such large quantum of reductions in both borrowing cost and SRR, which is the amount of reserve capital that banking institutions place with the central bank.

A lower SRR translates into more loanable funds to consumers.

“Its drastic move also seems to suggest that the central bank is done with cutting rates at least for the first half of the year,” he said.

Citi Asia Pacific economics and market analysis vice-president Kit Wei Zheng described Bank Negara’s move as “very bold” and “probably a sign that recession may be hitting home.”

Exports and industrial production have been falling for the past months alongside layoffs and a fall in loan approvals.

The Government is targeting a 3.5% growth this year with certain quarters projecting 2.5%, the lowest growth rate in at least eight years.

Related Posts:

Android Apps | Indonesian Culture | Android Stuff | Flora Fauna | Happynes | Itechno News | beauty places | Healthy Tips | Seo Tutorial | Love Indonesia | People Biography | Around The World | Bhaaa | 3D Games |
Android Apps | Indonesian Culture | Android Stuff | Flora Fauna | Itechno News | Around The Worlds | beauty places in worlds | Happines joy | Seo Tutorial | Love Indonesia | People Biography | Healthy Tips