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Singapore
CPI forecast Forecasts
for January consumer price gains from the same month the year
before:
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CPI
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Firm
|
YoY%
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Media
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5.6%
|
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Average
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5.7%
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High
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6.8%
|
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Low
|
4.5%
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Number
of Estimates
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16
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Action
Economics
|
6.0%
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Barclays
Capital
|
5.7%
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CIMB-GK
Research
|
5.6%
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Citi
|
6.5%
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DBS
Bank
|
6.6%
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Forecast
Ltd.
|
5.5%
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Fortis
Bank
|
5.5%
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HSBC
Singapore
|
6.0%
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ING
Groep NV
|
5.8%
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JPMorgan
Chase
|
5.4%
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OCBC
Bank
|
4.5%
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Sumitomo
Mitsui Banking
|
5.5%
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Standard
Chartered
|
5.5%
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Thomson
IFR
|
4.8%
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UBS
|
4.8%
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UOB
Group
|
6.8%
|
|
Singapore's
January annual inflation increases, exceeds expectations RTT
News 25 Feb
08 http://www.rttnews.com/forex/economicnews.asp...
Singapore's
annual inflation in January recorded highest growth since March
1982 and exceeded economists' expectations, official data showed
Monday.
The Department of Statistics announced that
annual inflation stood at 6.6% in January, up from 4.4% in
December. Annual inflation far exceeded the 5.6% expected by
economists.
Among the various factors affecting the
increase in consumer prices, housing costs jumped 11.1%
year-on-year in January, while transportation and communication
charges were up 6.9%. Food prices, on the other hand, grew 5.8%
in January.
Based on the report of the statistical
department, consumer prices rose 1.3% month-on-month in January,
while on a seasonally adjusted basis, the monthly increase in the
CPI was 1.5%.
On a monthly basis, food prices had a 1.1%
increase, which was largely due to greater demand for food items,
especially pork, ahead of the Lunar New Year period in early
February.
Housing costs marked a 4.1% increase over the
month in January. Education and stationery costs grew 2.5%.
The
3-month moving average inflation rose 0.8% month-on-month in
January, the report added.
Singapore
Jan CPI seen at new multi-year high as food, transport costs rise
Pearl
Bantillo Thomson Financial 25 Feb
08 http://www.thomsonfxhub.com/fxhub/forex-news-detail.jsf...
Singapore's
consumer price index likely rose to another multi-year high in
January as costs of food and transportation escalated, economists
said.
The 2-percentage point hike in the goods and
services tax, which took effect July 2007, may have also
continued to lift consumer prices.
Four economists polled
by Thomson Financial had forecast annual inflation in the
city-state to come in at between 4.5-5.6 percent for January. In
December inflation accelerated to a 25-year high of 4.4
percent.
Consumer prices probably rose between 0.3-0.8
percent in January from the previous month, according to the
poll.
The Department of Statistics will release the CPI
data at midday.
'Little respite [is] expected on
Singapore's inflation front in the near term, especially ahead of
the Chinese New Year festive season,' said Selena Ling, economist
at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.
The Lunar New Year fell
on the first week of Februay.
'We would have a lot of food
price pressures coming from the region. China was hit,' said
Vishnu Varathan, economist at Forecast. 'Food inflation in the
region has been very persistent so that would be one prime source
of inflation.'
China's CPI rose 7.1 percent in January
from a year earlier, the highest in more than 11 years, largely
due to food supply disruptions caused by snowstorms in the
mainland.
Singapore's inflation last month may come in at
5.5 percent, on account of higher property tax payable that come
with the revision of annual values of properties, said Alvin
Liew, economist at Standard Chartered Bank.
The Singapore
government recognized the strong inflationary pressures building
in the economy, prompting it to raise its inflation forecast for
this year to 4.5-5.5 percent from 3.5-4.5 percent. Inflation
averaged 2.1 percent in 2007.
But the Monetary Authority
of Singapore - the de facto central bank - has said its monetary
policy of allowing a gradual and modest appreciation of the
Singapore dollar's nominal effective exchange rate remains
appropriate.
The MAS reins in inflation by managing the
movement of the Singapore dollar nominal effective exchange rate
against a basket of trade-weighted currencies. A policy of modest
to gradual appreciation of the Singapore dollar has long been
maintained, with a slight tightening bias adopted in October last
year when inflation started creeping up.
Forecast's
Varathan said while Singapore's inflation will likely peak above
6 percent and could even top 7 percent in April, the MAS is
unlikely to tighten its monetary policy given the strong downside
risks to the economy if the US economy significantly slows this
year.
'While they may still play the Singapore dollar at
the top end of the [trading] band to keep inflation in check, I
do not see them raising the midpoint and I don't see them
steepening the band just yet. They probably would want to have a
good measure of caution and not want to tighten,' said Varathan.
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