Switzerland Faces Rate-Cut Dilemma Over Limited Easing Space

1 month ago


(Bloomberg) — Switzerland’s central bank is about to take another cliffhanger decision as officials weigh whether to use up one of their last interest-rate cuts before reaching zero.

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While investors and most forecasters anticipate the Swiss National Bank to deliver a quarter-point reduction in the benchmark to 0.25%, a shifting backdrop has left the result on Thursday uncertain enough for UBS Group AG economists to describe it as “a coin toss.”

Tolerable low inflation, resilient economic growth, a weaker franc and limited policy space to fight strengthening speak in favor of leaving borrowing costs unchanged. But a rocky global trade environment threatened by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs could yet prompt a long-predicted cut.

The dilemma for officials led by Martin Schlegel is tough enough to make their decision by far the most suspenseful among advanced economies in a week when peers in the US and UK are widely expected to stay on hold. That would be typical for the SNB, whose whole cycle of hiking and easing since mid-2022 has kept investors on their toes.

“The only significant uncertainty to the view of the SNB holding rates steady at this meeting, for me, stems from a certain dimming of the global growth picture,” said Claude Maurer, chief economist of Basel-based BAK Economics. “This would speak in favor of a further cut.”

Maurer is one of just a handful of forecasters who predict no change in a Bloomberg survey. The rest reckon the SNB will lower its rate by a quarter-point, and traders assign a 75% chance of that outcome. Most economists say it will then stay at 0.25%.

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What Bloomberg Economics Says…

“We expect zero interest rate policy to be avoided, though a small degree of contingency remains should further easing become necessary.”

—Jean Dalbard, economist. For full preview, click here

It’s no easy task to second-guess the SNB, which notoriously jolted markets with its sudden imposition of a cap on the franc in 2011 followed by an even more abrupt removal in 2015.

The SNB also surprised with its half-point hike in June 2022 before a 75 basis-point increase that was smaller than some investors had predicted. Economists then split three ways in advance of a half-point move at the end of that year. It unexpectedly held in September 2023, delivered an unanticipated cut in March last year, and a bigger-than-forecast half-point reduction in December.



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