Central banks are now open all hours.
Just as they worked weekends through the financial crisis, policymakers are again signaling they can strike at any time for the good of their economies.
Spooked by the threat of deflation, Sweden’s Riksbank became the latest to put investors on alert when on Thursday it said that it is “prepared to do more at short notice” after cutting its main interest rate below zero and unexpectedly saying it plans to buy government bonds.
“To ensure that inflation rises towards the target, the Riksbank is prepared to quickly make monetary policy more expansionary, even between the ordinary monetary policy meetings, should the need arise,” it said in a statement.
The world’s oldest central bank is not alone in throwing out its normal agenda. The Reserve Bank of India ignored its calendar of policy meetings to cut its key rate on Jan. 15, while Russia’s central bank increased its benchmark at 1am on Dec. 16 last year.
The Swiss National Bank announced plans to charge banks to deposit cash with it on Dec. 18 last year, just a week after its quarterly policy meeting, and shocked markets on Jan. 15 when it abolished its currency cap — again ignoring its own schedule.
Singapore said on Jan. 28 it would seek a slower currency appreciation and the People’s Bank of China also often acts at random times.
Denmark has cut its deposit rate four times this year, though a need to defend the krone’s peg to the euro means it has always acted when it chooses. It chose not to move yesterday, which was a surprise to some economists.
The ad-hoc actions undermine the traditional preference of central banks to be predictable and transparent. Indeed, a post-crisis trend has been to use forward guidance as a policy tool in signaling intentions.
The theory goes that if investors can easily forecast the short-term interest rates of central banks, then that will influence long-term borrowing costs too. Financial markets should also be less volatile if policy can be forecast.
So why the switch? One reason is that policymakers are increasingly willing to move when incoming data or market moves challenge their previous outlook, demanding a quick response.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan shifted a day after evidence mounted that price pressures were diminishing.
Indicating an all-out effort, no matter the time, also helps reinforce the decisions they have already made in markets and keeps investors wanting to test them on tenterhooks. Are you really going to buy Danish kroner or dump Russian equities if you know a central bank could suddenly shift policy?
Perhaps the biggest reason, and why ING Groep NV chief international economist Rob Carnell predicts more surprise shifts to come, is the so-called currency wars.
Most notably, the European Central Bank’s use of quantitative easing has sent the euro sliding, forcing up other currencies in response, especially those elsewhere in Europe. Meantime, the dollar has surged as the US Federal Reserve considers raising interest rates.
“Certain big central banks are making moves, leaving a lot of others having to respond on the fly to the implications of those moves,” Carnell said. “They have to keep a step ahead and we’ve seen that on a number of occasions. There will probably be more surprises.”
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