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Central Bank Of Armenia Extends Monetary Loosening Cycle To Septembe

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  • Central Bank Of Armenia Extends Monetary Loosening Cycle To Septembe

    CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA EXTENDS MONETARY LOOSENING CYCLE TO SEPTEMBER

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    September 9, 2009

    BYLINE: Venla Sipila

    The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) yesterday cut its refinancing
    interest rate by 25 basis points, taking the policy rate to 5.0%,
    Reuters reports. The CBA Board took the decision in order to support
    economic activity, while the move was facilitated by stabilising
    trends in the financial markets. Weakened inflation pressures have
    facilitated a prolonged monetary loosening cycle in Armenia this
    year; the September cut already was the seventh policy interest
    rate in 2009. The previous reduction was enacted only in August,
    when the refinance rate was taken from 5.5% to 5.25% (seeArmenia:
    12 August 2009: ).

    Significance:Some further monetary loosening was expected, given the
    weakness of inflation pressures in Armenia at the moment, together with
    the collapsing economic activity. Indeed, consumer prices in August
    continued to fall in monthly terms, while annual inflation in recent
    months have remained comfortably below the CBA's targeted rate of 4%
    with 1.5 percentage points on either side (seeArmenia: 1 September
    2009: ). Given the collapsing real economy, further interest rate
    cuts may still follow in the coming months. However, the CBA needs
    to balance its quest to support economic activity with the need to
    secure price stability, and given the very wide external financing
    needs of the economy in comparison to its foreign currency earnings,
    the potential for even sharp further depreciation of the dram exchange
    rate remains a risk. Any notable dram weakening would probably transfer
    relatively rapidly to intensifying inflation pressures. Then again,
    due to the undeveloped state of the financial sector, the role of
    Armenian refinancing still remains mainly an indicator of the Central
    Bank's inflation expectations, rather than an effective policy tool
    that would have a clear impact on market interest rates.
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