22 January 2025

A view of the headquarters of the Swiss National Bank (SNB), before a press conference in Zurich, Switzerland, March 21, 2024.

Dennis Balibus | Reuters

The Swiss National Bank on Thursday cut its key interest rate by 50 basis points, beating expectations for a smaller cut amid an ongoing struggle with low inflation and a strong Swiss franc.

This move raises the bank's key interest rate to 0.5%. More than 85% of economists They were surveyed Reuters had expected the bank to implement a cut of 25 basis points.

Switzerland has become the first major economy to loosen its grip on monetary policy In MarchFour reductions were implemented this year as part of the battle to tame the rise in the value of the national currency and the decline in consumer prices.

“Underlying inflationary pressures fell again this quarter. Today's easing of monetary policy by the SNB takes this development into account,” the bank said on Thursday after the first meeting under new President Martin Schlegel. “The SNB will continue to monitor the situation closely, and will adjust its monetary policy if necessary to ensure inflation remains within a range consistent with price stability in the medium term.”

The bank has now issued a new conditional inflation forecast lower than its September forecast, reflecting a “lower-than-expected” reading for oil products and food and expecting “little change over the medium term”.

The new forecasts put average annual inflation at 1.1% for 2024, 0.3% for 2025, and 0.8% for 2026. It assumes that the SNB interest rate will stabilize at 0.5% over the entire forecast horizon.

Limited inflation

Swiss inflation rose to 0.7% On an annual basis in November, compared to an annual reading of 0.6% In October. Widely viewed as a safe haven amid political turmoil in the euro zone, the franc has largely resisted capitulation despite the Swiss central bank's interest rate cuts. This rise has clouded the prospects for Swiss export opportunities, which were already diminished by tepid demand abroad and weak sales orders.

In OctoberThe business climate index produced by industry association Swissmechanic fell to its weakest level since January 2021, with the body citing expectations of further declines in orders, sales and margins in the fourth quarter.

Fellow industry association Swissmem reported in November of continued decline in Switzerland's technology sectors, Confirming“The leading indicators do not point to a recovery any time soon. Against this background, efforts must be intensified at the political level in order to facilitate access to the growing markets of the Swiss export economy. In concrete terms, free trade.”

Official figures revealed that the broader economy recorded “below average growth” of 0.2% in the third quarter, after 0.4% in the previous three months. At the end of Novemberburdened by the industrial sector.

Market focus will shift later in the session to the European Central Bank meeting, which is widely expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points.

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