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News Highlight
19th Jan 2012

Interest Rate remains unchanged!

The South African Reserve Bank left its repo rate unchanged at 5.5% on Thursday as expected, with concerns about a slowing economy off-setting the pressures from inflation, which is likely to stay outside its target band for longer than previously expected.

At its first policy meeting of 2012, the bank raised its inflation forecast, saying it expected inflation to be outside its 3-6% target range throughout 2012, with the recent depreciation of the rand being the main ...[MORE]

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Date & Weather

Date: 04.02.2012
Time: 17:41

Capetown:

Temp.: 29 °C / 84 °F
Wind: S / 14 kn
Sunrise: 05:43
Sunset: 20:15

Johannesburg:

Temp.: 19 °C / 66 °F
Wind: VRB / 3 kn
Sunrise: 05:19
Sunset: 19:22
IBN News (22nd Sep 2009): Inflation down, Interest Rate unchanged

News-Archive


Inflation down, Interest Rate unchanged - 22nd Sep 2009

South Africa's central bank left its repo rate unchanged at 7 percent on Tuesday, amid signs that the economy is on the mend while inflation remains above the target band, but is seen moderating.

The announcement by central bank governor Tito Mboweni came some 6 hours after official data showed annual targeted consumer inflation slowed in line with expectations to 6.4 percent in August, although it remains above the top end of a 3 to 6 percent target band.

"Given the current policy stance, inflation is expected to continue moderating and to return to within the inflation target range during the forecast period", Mbeki said in this meeting, which is the last one he chaired before Gill Marcus will be handed the reigns of the Reserve Bank.

Mboweni said inflation was likely to return on a sustained basis to the inflation target range by the second quarter of 2010.

The South African Reserve Bank has slashed rates by a total of 500 basis points since December 2008 to help boost growth as the economy struggles with its first recession in 17 years.

Mboweni said there were early indications that a lower turning point in domestic output may have been reached.

GDP contracted by 3.0 percent in the second quarter after shrinking 6.4 percent in the first.
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