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Bank of America sees Mexican inflation rising to 4% this year

Latin America’s second-largest economy had posted a higher-than-expected inflation rate for June and the Mexican central bank, known as Banxico, did not rule out further rate cuts.

“But we believe further cuts will be data dependent, in particular to developments in inflation and the foreign exchange,” according to the Bank of America research note dated Thursday.

With the U.S. presidential election in the second half of 2020, fiscal concerns in Mexico and the coronavirus still spreading, Bank of America said Banxico’s key overnight lending rate should stay at around 5% for the remainder of the year due in part to core inflation remaining above the central bank’s 3% target.

Mexico’s national statistics agency INEGI said the annual inflation rate picked up in June to 3.33% from May’s 2.84%. It compares with a rate of 3.95% from the same month a year earlier.

A Reuters poll of analysts had forecast annual inflation at 3.20%.

Banxico cut its benchmark interest rate to 5.00% on June 25, the lowest level in nearly four years, citing worries about growth and an uncertain outlook due to fallout from the pandemic.


Source: Economy - investing.com

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