Central banks in the Gulf including in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia matched the Federal Reserve’s 25 basis-point rate increase on Wednesday as they aim to protect their currencies’ peg against the US dollar.
(Bloomberg) — Central banks in the Gulf including in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia matched the Federal Reserve’s 25 basis-point rate increase on Wednesday as they aim to protect their currencies’ peg against the US dollar.
Although inflation is relatively muted in the wider Gulf region in comparison to the US and Europe, regulators have little room to maneuver when it comes to monetary policy due to the greenback-pegging policy. They tend to move in lockstep with the US central bank decisions with most regulators in the region following the Fed’s rate hikes this year.
Read: Fed Raises Rates to 22-Year High, Leaves Door Open for More
- Saudi Arabia increased its repo rate a quarter percentage point to 6% and its reverse repo rate to 5.5%
- Kuwait matched the Fed’s 25 basis-point increase for the first time in months. It raised its discount rate to 4.25% from 4%
- The Gulf country maintains a peg to a basket of currencies thought to be dominated by the dollar
- Bahrain increased its one-week deposit rate by 25 basis points to 6.25%, its overnight deposit rate to 6% but maintained its four-week deposit rate at 6.75%
- Qatar raised its lending rate 25 basis points to 6.25%, its deposit rate to 5.75% and its repo rate to 6%
- The UAE increased its overnight deposit rate to 5.4% from 5.15%
–With assistance from Zaid Sabah.
(Updates with Saudi Arabia’s decision to raise rates in first bullet point.)
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