The Russian central bank is expected to raise its key interest rate by a hefty 100 basis points for the second time in a row as it struggles to rein in inflation that could accelerate from the recent rouble drop, a Reuters poll suggested on Monday.
The central bank hiked rates seven times in 2021 but failed to rein in inflation, its main area of responsibility, which hit a six-year high, denting living standards and spurring President Vladimir Putin to call for pre-emptive steps.
Twenty-seven of 33 analysts and economists polled by Reuters predicted that Russia will raise the key rate by 100 basis points to 9.50% on Friday, its highest since March 2017.
“The main reason for such a decision is the lack of improvement in inflationary readings,” said Igor Rapokhin, chief debt strategist at SberCIB.
Such a hike would take the key rate above the annual consumer inflation rate of 8.82% seen in late January, a level far above the 4% target and the highest since early 2016.
The central bank has repeatedly promised to make sure annual inflation will slow to 4.0-4.5% by year-end, a task which is looking increasingly difficult to fulfil.
Adding to inflationary pressure is the recent rouble drop to a near 15-month low of 80.4125 to the dollar in late January, when Western powers threatened to impose more sanctions if Russia invaded Ukraine. The Kremlin denies having any such plan.
The market is keeping an eye on January inflation data that is due on Wednesday and could offer more clues to the outcome of the Feb. 11 rate-setting meeting.
Four polled experts predicted a rate hike to 9.25%, while two economists expected an increase to 9.00% on Friday.
“If the reading is above 1.1% month-on-month, I will increase my February CBR call to 100 basis points,” said Tatiana Orlova, an economist from Oxford Economics who recently changed her call to a 75 from 50 basis point hike.
Higher rates help tame inflation by pushing up lending costs and increasing the appeal of bank deposits, while also propping up the rouble.
Russia could further raise the key rate to 10% in March and embark on monetary easing in the second half of 2022, market experts said in a separate poll in late January.
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