PERU: No Urgency For Further Rate Cuts As Credit Growth Near Three-Year High

Sep-29 14:51
  • Private sector credit rose by 4.5% y/y in August, following a 3.9% gain in July, according to data from the BCRP, marking the strongest pace of growth since November 2022. On the monthly basis, total credit rose by 0.7%. Personal loan growth rose to 5.9% y/y, while business loan growth edged up to 3.5% y/y.
  • The data come ahead of September CPI inflation figures on Wednesday, when the headline rate is seen rising ~30bp to 1.4% y/y, keeping it well below the midpoint of the BCRP’s 1-3% target range.
  • Speaking recently, BCRP Governor Velarde said there was no need to be aggressive with rate cuts, which is consistent with messaging after this month’s 25bp cut to 4.25%, when the Board said that the policy rate is now very close to neutral. Amid robust activity data, the BCRP recently raised its 2025 GDP estimate by 10bp to 3.2%, while it continues to see inflation ending this year below target, before rising to 2% next year.
  • Separately, following the approval of a new pension withdrawal bill, requests for withdrawals from the AFPs will begin Oct 21, with payments starting Nov 20 and continuing through Feb 18, 2026. As a reminder, this is Peru’s eighth pension withdrawal in recent years, with the bill approved by Congress earlier this month allowing workers to withdraw up to $7.5bn from private pension funds.
  • Governor Velarde has expressed his concern that further withdrawals could create future problems. However, withdrawals could benefit the PEN near-term (which remains near five-year highs against USD), unless the BCRP steps in.

Historical bullets

RATINGS: S&P Upgrades Portugal To A+ From A

Aug-29 20:28

S&P has upgraded Portugal's long-term credit rating to A+ from A, with a stable outlook (had been positive).

  • This is the 7th S&P upgrade for Portugal, from a low of BB in 2012-15. Only four ratings are higher (AA-, AA, AA+, AAA). This is the same rating as Slovakia, and just above Spain (A) per S&P.
  • Per Bloomberg: "*S&PGR UPGRADES PORTUGAL TO 'A+' ON LOWER DEBT; OUTLOOK STABLE" 

STIR: Still Eyeing September And December Cuts

Aug-29 20:16

With few market-moving data points this week, implied Fed rate cuts essentially held onto their post-Jackson Hole upward repricing, adding a couple of basis points of easing for good measure heading into the Labor day weekend.

  • Indeed, the lack of movement is somewhat remarkable given this week's extraordinary "firing" of Fed Governor Cook, which is currently being fought out in the courts. In all it probably added to the dovish tone on the near-term rate outlook post-Jackson Hole but not substantially so, at least so far.
  • The current path sees a September rate cut priced with nearly 90% implied probability, with 56bp of cuts through end-year (a cumulatively priced second cut in December) and 83bp through March 2026 (3+ cuts). 
image
image

MACRO ANALYSIS: MNI US Macro Weekly: One Week, Two Labor Days

Aug-29 20:10

We've just published our latest US Macro Weekly - Download Full Report Here

  • A busy pre-holiday week for data brought mixed economic signals and little net change in Fed easing expectations, putting next week’s labor day – Friday with its nonfarm payrolls report, of course, with apologies to Monday’s federal holiday – in focus for the FOMC and market participants alike.
  • Second-quarter GDP was revised up by more than expected in the second reading, to 3.3% Q/Q SAAR, driven by better-than-previously estimated domestic demand but still leaving 1st half growth in slightly weaker territory vs last year. That said, the Atlanta Fed's Q3 GDPNow estimate jumped to 3.47% (though the implied contribution from net exports in the quarter looks somewhat dubious, as we explain).
  • The other major release of the week was July's Personal Income and Outlays report, which showed a modest uptick in income and spending on the month. However, the broader trends remain mixed at best, as real disposable income growth remains soft and services consumption is failing to regain traction.
  • Core PCE inflation was close to expectations in July as the Y/Y accelerated to 2.9% for its fastest since February as it moves further away from recent lows of 2.6% having stalled above the 2% target. Recent trend rates are a little hotter but the median FOMC member will still need to see a further acceleration to meet their 4Q25 forecasts from June.
  • Labor data were mixed. Latest jobless claims were in line to slightly better than expected, with initial claims trending a little higher but still impressively low whilst continuing claims are broadly plateauing after sharper increases in 1H25. But within the Conference Board consumer survey, the labor differential edged lower again, suggesting a continued upward trend in the unemployment rate.
  • Elsewhere: regional Fed activity surveys were individually mixed, but combined generally showed an improvement in both manufacturing and services activity albeit with continued upside price pressures.
  • Consumer sentiment (UMichigan and Conference Board surveys) and housing activity remained soft.
  • Apart from Gov Waller again making the case from rate cuts, other FOMC colleagues who commented this week were a little more guarded when it came to the need for easing, to our ear.
image