logo
Malaysia central bank lowers key rate to 2.75% on weaker growth outlook

Malaysia central bank lowers key rate to 2.75% on weaker growth outlook

Reuters09-07-2025
KUALA LUMPUR, July 9 (Reuters) - Malaysia's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate MYINTR=ECI, opens new tab for the first time in five years on Wednesday, as it looks to support the economy amid a weaker growth outlook and rising uncertainty in global trade.
Bank Negara Malaysia lowered its overnight policy rate (OPR) by 25 basis points to 2.75% from 3.00%, where it had been since May 2023, as had been expected by 17 of 31 economists surveyed in a Reuters .
The ceiling and floor rates of the OPR corridor are correspondingly reduced to 3% and 2.5% respectively, the central bank said in a statement.
The rate decision came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 25% tariff on Malaysian exports to the United States.
BNM said the global growth outlook was weighed down by uncertainties surrounding tariffs, as well as geopolitical tensions, which could lead to greater volatility in global financial markets and commodity prices.
While the Malaysian economy was on a strong footing, the central bank said external uncertainties could affect Malaysia's growth prospects.
"The reduction in the OPR is... a pre-emptive measure aimed at preserving Malaysia's steady growth path amid moderate inflation prospects," the central bank said.
Economists had expected at least one 25-basis-point cut this year, which would hold until the end of 2026, though there was no consensus on where the rate would be then. Estimates for the end of next year ranged from 2.25% to 3.00%.
Malaysia has reported a string of soft economic data in recent months with growth slowing to 4.4% in the first quarter, while exports unexpectedly fell in May.
Inflation has also remained relatively subdued, with consumer prices rising 1.2% in June, a four-year low.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said in May that Malaysia was unlikely to meet its growth outlook of between 4.5% and 5.5% this year, while BNM has said it would have to lower its growth forecast range due to uncertainties arising from U.S. tariff policies.
The central bank also lowered banks' statutory reserve requirement (SRR) ratio by 100 basis points to 1.00% in May - the first SRR reduction since March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic - reinforcing a dovish policy outlook.
Malaysia's trade ministry said this week it will continue talking to its U.S. counterparts "in good faith" to address outstanding issues, and clarify the scope and impact of the revised U.S. tariffs.
Headline and core inflation averaged 1.4% and 1.9% in the first five months of the year respectively, BNM said, adding that consumer prices are expected to remain moderate in 2025.
The central bank projects headline inflation to range between 2% to 3.5% in 2025, and core inflation at 1.5% to 2.5%. Both headline and core inflation came in at 1.8% in 2024.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bank ‘must cut rates six times' over next year to boost ailing economy
Bank ‘must cut rates six times' over next year to boost ailing economy

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Bank ‘must cut rates six times' over next year to boost ailing economy

Andrew Bailey must slash interest rates six times over the next year to bolster flagging growth, economists have warned. The Bank of England Governor and his colleagues on the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) are expected to cut borrowing costs from 4.25pc to 4pc this Thursday. But a growing cohort of economists predict Bank officials will be forced to go much further over the next 12 months. Six cuts would take the base rate to 2.75pc next year – the lowest level since late 2022. Peder Beck-Friis, an economist at Pimco, an investment company, said higher taxes, slower growth and the weakening jobs market will all push the Bank to cut rates further next year. 'While inflation has been surprisingly firm, we see good reasons to expect a slowdown. Regulatory price hikes, including in employment taxes, have pushed prices up, but wage growth is softening and the labour market is weakening,' he said. Companies are passing the £25bn increase in employers' National Insurance contributions on to customers, but 'once this tax shock fades, we expect inflation to ease, as seen in other developed countries'. 'We expect the Bank to accelerate rate cuts later this year, with the policy rate settling near 2.75pc next year,' he said. Michel Nies, from Citi, predicts rate cuts in August and November before an acceleration from December in the wake of 'very likely tax increases in the autumn Budget', taking the base rate to 2.75pc. He cites the weakening jobs market as the critical factor. The economy has lost 178,000 employees on payroll over the past year. Businesses in particular are taking a beating: 'The divergence between public and private sector employment growth continues to widen with the former still masking a sustained contraction in the latter,' Mr Nies said. Bruna Skarica, at Morgan Stanley, also expects cuts to 2.75pc because unemployment has risen to 4.7pc, the highest rate in four years. 'The build-up of slack in the labour market ... can only result in pay and price disinflation over time,' she said. 'The laws of economic gravity can be delayed, but not denied.' These economists remain in the minority, and even this week's anticipated rate cut will not be entirely uncontroversial. Policymakers are cutting interest rates even though inflation, at 3.6pc and rising, is well above its 2pc target. However, monetary policy takes as long as two years to feed through to consumer prices, meaning this week's rate decision will only fully pass through to inflation in mid-2027 - and will have little effect on the rise in living costs this year. Jack Meaning, a former Bank of England economist now at Barclays, forecasts a three-way split on the MPC. He anticipates that two policymakers will vote to hold rates, two for a double cut to 3.75pc, and the majority of five backing a move to 4pc. 'Despite these divergent views on both sides, we think the centre of the committee, and ultimately the decisive bloc, will continue on a gradual and careful quarterly rate cutting path, until it reaches 3.5pc in February 2026,' he said. The most recent three-way split came in May, when external MPC members Swati Dhingra and Alan Taylor voted for a half percentage point rate cut to 4pc.

Netherlands to start NATO's new Ukraine weapons finance scheme with $578 mln payment
Netherlands to start NATO's new Ukraine weapons finance scheme with $578 mln payment

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Netherlands to start NATO's new Ukraine weapons finance scheme with $578 mln payment

AMSTERDAM, Aug 4 (Reuters) - The Netherlands will be the first contributor to NATO's new "Priority Ukraine Requirements List" (PURL) financing mechanism for Ukraine weapons with a 500 million euros ($578 million) payment, the Dutch defence ministry said on Monday. U.S. President Donald Trump said last month the U.S. would supply weapons to Ukraine, paid for by European allies, but did not provide details on how this would work. Reuters reported on Friday that NATO countries, Ukraine, and the U.S. were developing a new Ukraine weapons financing mechanism. ($1 = 0.8649 euros)

The jobs data revisions that cost a US government statistician her job
The jobs data revisions that cost a US government statistician her job

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

The jobs data revisions that cost a US government statistician her job

Aug 4 (Reuters) - The revisions to previous estimates of the size of U.S. payrolls gains for May and June that prompted President Donald Trump to fire Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer on Friday were by any measure extraordinarily large. Indeed, the combined downward revision for the two months of 258,000 was the largest - outside of those during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic - since at least 1979. Here's a quick graphical breakdown: The monthly nonfarm payrolls report, released typically on the first Friday of each month, includes an initial estimate of employment changes for the immediately preceding month and revisions to the earlier estimates for the prior two months. BLS makes the revisions because more survey responses come in over the ensuing weeks and because it updates the seasonal factors affecting each month's estimates. The BLS on Friday said 133,000 fewer jobs had been created in June than first estimated. Over the last several years, the first estimate of the net change in payrolls each month has been revised lower more often than not. It has been revised down in eight of the last 12 BLS reports over the last year. The downward revision on Friday was the largest since the first estimate of payrolls gains for March 2021, published in April 2021, was revised down by 146,000 a month later. Over the last three years through June, the median estimate revision was -10,000. That contrasts with a median increase of 8,000 during the decade before the pandemic and a median increase of 2,000 over the series history since 1979. The total for May's payroll gains was revised lower by 125,000 in Friday's report, when the third estimate for payrolls for that month was published. That figure was the largest downward reduction of payrolls gains for a second revision - outside of the pandemic era - since the estimate for March 1983 was revised down by 127,000 in the report published in June 1983. The combined downward revision for the two previous months - May and June - was larger than anything reported outside of the pandemic era. Indeed, the estimates for the two prior months combined have more often than not been revised higher. Since 1979, the median two-month combined estimate change was an upward revision of 10,000. Measured in absolute terms - revisions in either direction - Friday's revision also stands out. There have only been four larger revisions: +709,000 for November and December 2021; -642,000 for March and April 2020; +285,000 for August and September 1983; and +414,000 for April and May 1981.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store