HSBC analysis: New CBRT governor, same policy guidance

The CBRT published its new inflation report yesterday and made no changes to its end-2024, end-2025, and end-2026 inflation forecasts of 36%, 14%, and 9%. The mid-point forecast trajectory shows the bank expects annual inflation to continue to rise in the near term, reaching 73% in May, before rapid disinflation takes hold in Q3 and Q4.
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Compared to the November inflation report, a smaller output gap estimate, higher unit labour costs, import prices, and food prices would have added roughly 3pp to the end-year inflation forecast. But the bank believes that the impact of monetary tightening on pricing behaviour and underlying inflation dynamics has been stronger than expected, counteracting these upward pressures and leaving the end-year estimate unchanged.
Regarding the near term course of policy, Governor Karahan largely reiterated the guidance from the January MPC meeting (Then we came to the end, 25 January). He said that the tightening cycle is now over and that it is too soon to discuss rate cuts.
He added that the rate-setting committee will maintain the current policy stance until there is a significant decline in the underlying inflation trend and inflation expectations fall towards the bank’s inflation forecasts.
Of these two preconditions, the former is more straightforward to measure. In addition to various domestic demand indicators, the bank monitors the seasonally adjusted monthly change in core inflation measures to gauge the underlying trend of price growth. CBRT estimates that this measure peaked at close to 7% m-o-m in October, fell to 2.9% in December, and rose – temporarily in the bank’s view – to nearly 4% in January.