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    Thai central bank to hike rates by 25 bps on Aug. 2, ending tightening cycle – Reuters poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – The Bank of Thailand (BOT) will deliver a final 25-basis-point interest rate increase on August 2 and then hold rates steady until 2025 as the inflation outlook remains high and uncertain, a Reuters poll found.While annual headline inflation eased to 0.23% in June, below the central bank’s target range of 1%-3%, it expects prices to pick up later in the year, suggesting the BOT is not done with tightening yet.Governor Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput said last week the inflation outlook remains within expectations, and monetary policy will focus more on the outlook than on current data.That compelled economists in a July 17-26 Reuters poll, who had previously said the modest policy tightening cycle of 150 basis points had ended in May, to now anticipate one more hike.A strong majority of economists polled, 18 of 22, expected the BOT to raise its benchmark one-day repurchase rate by 25 basis points to 2.25% on August 2 – the highest since January 2014. Four forecast no change.”The BOT’s recent hawkish rhetoric has made us change our view, and we now expect the bank to hike in August…the last hike, in our view. However, we also note the risk of another hike in September,” said Shreya Sodhani, economist at Barclays (LON:BARC).”While the MPC (Monetary Policy Committee) continues to highlight risks of inflation rising as growth and tourism pick up, we think the hikes are driven by concerns around financial stability and the need to build policy space.”Inflation will average 1.8% this year and 1.9% in 2024, still within the BOT’s target, the poll showed.Among economists who had a longer-term view, 13 of 17 respondents expected the BOT to maintain it at 2.25% until at least mid-2024. Only two economists forecast a cut by then, while two said it would peak at 2.50%.But much will depend on the inflation trend and the economic recovery from the COVID pandemic, as well as tourist arrivals amid simmering political tensions in the country.Any delay in forming the next government would affect confidence in the economy, which was expected to grow 3.7% this year and 3.8% next.”The main risk is the still volatile political environment; any significant developments that threaten to derail the economic recovery could prompt a hold instead,” said Krystal Tan, economist at ANZ. More

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    Gulf central banks raise key interest rates by 25 bps, mirroring Fed

    CAIRO/DUBAI (Reuters) – Most Gulf central banks increased their key interest rates on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve raised rates by an expected quarter of a percentage point, citing still-elevated inflation as a rationale for the latest hike.The Fed raised its rate by 25 basis points (bps) on Wednesday and left the door open to another increase.Oil and gas exporters in the Gulf tend to follow the Fed’s lead on rate moves as most regional currencies are pegged to the U.S. dollar; only the Kuwaiti dinar is pegged to a basket of currencies, which includes the dollar.However, regional economies have been largely shielded from stubbornly high inflation, and a Reuters poll in April showed that inflation in the region was expected to be between 2.1% and 3.3% this year and fall lower in 2024.The central banks of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates mirrored the Fed move, as did Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain, although the latter left two rates out of four unchanged.The Saudi central bank, known as SAMA, increased its repo rate to 6% and its reverse repo rate to 5.5%, both by 25 bps, and the UAE said it would raise the base rate on its Overnight Deposit Facility to 5.40%, from 5.15%, effective Thursday.Qatar also increased its main rates by 25 bps, taking the lending interest rate to 6.25%, the deposit interest rate to 5.75% and the repo rate to 6%, while Bahrain raised the one-week deposit rate to 6.25% and the overnight deposit rate to 6%.The Central Bank of Kuwait increased its discount rate by 25 bps to 4.25% from 4%, and said in a statement it wants to remain supportive of economic growth, particularly in non-oil sectors. More

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    Fed lifts rates, Powell leaves door open to another hike in September

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday and Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the economy still needed to slow and the labor market to weaken for inflation to “credibly” return to the U.S. central bank’s 2% target.The hike, the Fed’s 11th in its last 12 meetings, set the benchmark overnight interest rate in the 5.25%-5.50% range, a level last seen just prior to the 2007 housing market crash and which has not been consistently exceeded for about 22 years.”The (Federal Open Market) Committee will continue to assess additional information and its implications for monetary policy,” the Fed said in language that was little changed from its June 14 statement and which left the central bank’s policy options open as it searches for a stopping point to the current tightening cycle.Powell made no promises either way, with a September meeting eight weeks from now considered “live” for another rate increase, though a continued slowing of inflation and weaker economic data may also prompt policymakers to pause.In a press conference following the Fed’s latest policy move, the Fed chief said the central bank was very much looking at “the totality” of incoming data, and particularly studying it for signs that the economy is heading for a period of “below-trend” growth that Powell thinks is necessary for inflation to fall.Key price measures are still increasing at more than double the Fed’s target. While inflation has been easing, that has so far happened with little apparent cost to the labor market, where the unemployment rate remains at a low 3.6%. Economic growth has remained above the Fed’s estimated 1.8% trend rate; economists polled by Reuters expect data on Thursday will show second-quarter gross domestic product expanded at just that level.Powell acknowledged as a positive development that inflation has fallen from the highs of last year without serious damage to the economy.But as the Fed enters a tricky period in its inflation fight, balancing the need for further rate increases against the risks of going too far, he said finishing the task on inflation will likely require some economic losses.”My base case is that we will be able to achieve inflation moving back down to our target without a really significant downturn that results in high levels of job losses,” Powell said. “But it’s a long way to be sure and we have a lot left … Reducing inflation is likely to require a period of below-trend growth and some softening of labor market conditions.” As stated after its meeting last month, the Fed said it would watch incoming data and study the impact of its rate hikes on the economy “in determining the extent of additional policy firming that may be appropriate” to reach its inflation target.Though inflation data since the Fed’s June 13-14 meeting has been weaker than expected, policymakers have been reluctant to alter their hawkish approach until there is more progress in reducing price pressures. In their most recent projections, issued at the end of the June meeting, 12 of 18 policymakers said they anticipated at least one more rate increase would be needed by the end of this year for financial conditions to be restrictive enough to ensure inflation continued to decline.Powell said decisions would continue to be made on a meeting-by-meeting basis and that officials can only provide limited guidance about what’s next for monetary policy in the current environment. “It is certainly possible that we would raise the (federal) funds rate again at the September meeting if the data warranted, and I would also say it’s possible that we would choose to hold steady at that meeting” if that was the right policy call, Powell said. He cautioned, however, against expecting any near-term easing in rates. “We’ll be comfortable cutting rates when we’re comfortable cutting rates, and that won’t be this year,” Powell said.’MODERATE’ GROWTH U.S. Treasury yields slid in choppy trading after the release of the Fed policy statement, while U.S. stocks ended largely unchanged. Futures markets showed little change in bets on the path of Fed rate increases over the remainder of the year, with small odds given to a rise in September.”The forward guidance remains unchanged as the committee leaves the door open to further rate hikes if inflation does not continue to trend lower,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide. “Our view is the Fed is likely done with rate hikes for this cycle since continued easing of inflation will passively lead to tighter policy as the Fed holds the nominal fed funds rate steady into 2024.”The Fed statement nodded to the economy’s continued outperformance.That has been captured in data as varied as continued job growth, strong vehicle sales, and the gargantuan attendance numbers from the new “Barbie” movie to the Taylor Swift concerts that earned a mention in the central bank’s most recent “Beige Book” report on economic activity.Job gains remain “robust,” the Fed said, while it described the economy as growing at a “moderate” pace, a slight upgrade from the “modest” pace seen as of the June meeting. Powell said he’s still holding out hope the economy can achieve a “soft landing,” a scenario in which inflation falls, unemployment remains relatively low and a recession is avoided.But his comments about the need for slower growth suggest a possible bias towards higher rates to put more pressure on demand. Though Powell said Fed staff had relaxed a prediction of a recession in coming months, outside analysts still think that’s what it may take to finish the inflation fight. “We would still think that you need a recession or some deeper slowing at some point in order to get inflation back to 2%,” said Veronica Clark, an economist at Citi. “So if we’re not having a recession in the next year, inflation is not back to 2% either … You are still dealing with high inflation and you do still need to slow things more.” More

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    ECB to hike rates again but keep options open for September

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) – The European Central Bank will raise interest rates for the ninth time in a row on Thursday and keep the door open to further moves as persistent inflation and growing evidence of an economic downturn pull policymakers in opposing directions.Fighting off a historic surge in prices, the ECB has lifted borrowing costs by 4 percentage points since last July and essentially promised another quarter-point increase this month, making Thursday’s decision the easiest all year.But the central bank for the 20 countries that use the euro is likely to ditch its practice of signalling its next move, promising a “data-dependent” approach instead. That will leave investors guessing whether another rate hike is coming in September or if July marks the end of the ECB’s fastest-ever tightening spree. One thing is clear, however: the end of rate increases is fast approaching and the debate appears to be about just one more small move before rate hikes are halted for what some policymakers think will be a long time.The ECB’s problem is that inflation is coming down too slowly and could take until 2025 to fall back to 2%, as a price surge initially driven by energy has seeped into the broader economy via large mark-ups and is fuelling the cost of services.While overall inflation is now just half its October peak, harder-to-break underlying price growth is hovering near historic highs and may have even accelerated this month. The labour market is also exceptionally tight, with record-low unemployment raising the risk that wages will rise quickly in the years ahead as unions use their increased bargaining power to recoup real incomes lost to inflation. That is why many investors and analysts are looking for the ECB to pull the trigger again in September and stop only if autumn wage data delivers relief.”Some timely indicators as the Indeed Wage Tracker, which tracks listed wages on job postings, has shown some softening during 2023, but the labour market impulse to inflation still appears way too strong on most broad wage measures,” Danske Bank economist Piet Haines Christiansen said. More tightening would be consistent with comments from a host of policymakers, including ECB board member Isabel Schnabel, that raising rates too far would still be less costly than not doing enough. Fuelling the ECB’s bias for more hikes, the U.S. Federal Reserve also raised borrowing costs on Wednesday and kept the door open to further tightening, hinting that price pressures could still prove more stubborn than some expect.”We see little room for an easing of the hawkish bias just yet,” Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY)’s Anatoli Annenkov said. “We still see mainly upside risks to inflation and expect a final 25 basis point hike in September before the focus shifts to the balance sheet at the end of the year.”RECESSION?But rapidly fading economic prospects should temper any hawkishness and ECB President Christine Lagarde is likely to take a cautious tone after a string of data in recent days suggested that higher rates are already weighing on growth. Indicators of business, investor and consumer sentiment and bank lending surveys point to a continued deterioration after the euro zone skirted a recession last winter. And with manufacturing in a deep recession and a previously resilient services sector showing signs of softening despite what is likely to be a superb summer holiday season, it is hard to see where any rebound would come from. Such weakness, exacerbated by a loss of purchasing power after inflation eroded real incomes, could push down price pressures faster than some expect, leaving less work for the central bank. “A pause after July would likely require further falls in realised core inflation, downward revisions in staff inflation forecasts and more signs of monetary policy transmission in the real economy,” Nordea’s Jan von Gerich said, adding that his baseline is for July to be the ECB’s last move. More

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    ERC-20 inventor discusses origins, new blockchains, BRC-20 and more

    Just as ERC-20 tokens were gaining traction, Vogelsteller left the Ethereum Foundation the same year to focus on developing a new blockchain, Lukso. In an interview with Cointelegraph, the ERC-20 inventor discussed his motivation for creating his multiverse blockchain, as well as the latest token standard developments in the sector.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Marketmind: China realism returns, Powell has spoken

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.A sense of cautious optimism could be the tone across Asia early on Thursday as China’s markets cool down, investors welcome fairly balanced comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, and await the European Central Bank’s rate decision.After a volatile start to markets this week, the concentration of major ‘event risk’ – the Fed and ECB meetings, the Bank of Japan’s policy decision on Friday and potential details on China’s stimulus measures – may be keeping investors from taking big bets.That said, some big earnings reports from some of the biggest U.S. tech firms continue to roll in, meaning there could be big price swings in individual stocks and sectors under the hood of the broader indices.This was in evidence on Wednesday on Wall Street. The Nasdaq fell only 0.1% and ‘big tech’ fell less than 1% but that masked huge moves in some shares which added or wiped out tens of billions of dollars of market cap. Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) fell 4%, Snap (NYSE:SNAP) plunged 15%, while Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) surged 5.5%.Shares in Meta jumped 7% in after hours trade after the Facebook (NASDAQ:META) owner reported stronger-than-expected Q2 revenues and forecast strong Q3 revenues.Investors in Asia will also wake up to the 11th U.S. interest rate hike since the Fed began hiking rates last year – and the highest rates in 22 years – and a fairly balanced policy outlook for the coming months from Fed Chair Jerome Powell.He left the door open to further tightening but also said the Fed could stay on hold if the data warranted and stressed that decisions will be made on a meeting by meeting basis. His measured remarks helped ensure a fairly subdued day on Wall Street.The Dow Jones Industrials rose 0.24%, insignificant in itself but at the same time historic – it was the 13th consecutive daily rise, the index’s longest winning streak since January 1987. Few would have imagined then that the market’s biggest ever fall – the 22% crash on Black Monday – was only nine months away.Back in Asia, a sense of realism returned over the expected measures from Beijing to revitalize the economy. After outsized gains on Tuesday – a 14% surge in property stocks – major indices in China and Hong Kong closed in the red.The main event on Thursday’s economic calendar is Chinese industrial profits for June, which could underline how weak the economy has been since Covid restrictions were lifted.Profits have been falling every month for a year, registering double-digit declines every month so far this year. They slumped 18.8% in May.Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Thursday:- China industrial profits (June)- Australia import and export prices (Q2)- European Central Bank policy decision (By Jamie McGeever; editing by Deepa Babington) More