OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s central bank said on Thursday it plans to raise its key policy interest rate next month, continuing a campaign of monetary tightening that started in September here.
Norges Bank’s monetary policy committee kept the rate on hold at 0.25% for now, as unanimously expected in a Reuters poll of economists.
“Based on the committee’s current assessment of the outlook and balance of risks, the policy rate will most likely be raised in December,” Governor Oeystein Olsen said in a statement.
The Norwegian economy has rebounded strongly from the pandemic, aided by an end to lockdowns and a sharp rise in the price of oil and gas, the country’s biggest export here.
Norges Bank’s monetary policy committee in September raised rates for the first time in two years and said it planned to hike by another 25 basis points (bps) by year-end, followed by three more increases in 2022.
The central bank is now all but certain to raise the policy rate by 25 bps in December, economists at Capital Economics said in a note to clients.
“We expect it to hike once per quarter next year which would take the rate back to the pre-pandemic level of 1.50% by the end of 2022,” they added.
But Norges Bank also said uncertainty surrounding the effects of higher interest rates warrants a “gradual rise”.
“This is likely meant to address expectations which have been popping up to a certain extent in the market lately, that we could see a rate change of for example 50 basis points, and they reject that here really,” DNB Markets Chief Economist Kjersti Haugland told Reuters.
MARKED UPSWING
Norges Bank is scheduled to provide updated growth forecasts along with its December rate decision. In September, it raised its prediction for GDP growth for 2022 to 4.5% from 4.1% seen previously.
“The reopening of society has led to a marked upswing in the Norwegian economy, and activity is higher than its pre-pandemic level. The economic upturn is continuing broadly as expected,” Norges Bank said on Thursday.
“Higher economic activity and rising wage growth will likely lift underlying inflation, but the recent (crown currency) appreciation could curb the rise in prices,” it added.
While Norway was among the first developed economies to start reversing its ultra-loose pandemic policies, several others have since followed suit here.
On Wednesday the U.S. Federal Reserve said it will begin trimming here its bond purchases, but neither the Fed nor the European Central Bank are expected to hike rates any time soon.
The crown weakened slightly to 9.87 against the euro at 0907 GMT from 9.85 just before Norges Bank’s announcement. In the last three months, the crown has strengthened by about 7% against the euro.
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