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Experts expect more interest rate hikes in Sweden

The inflationary pressure seems to be easing. But the central banks in the Western world aim to implement interest rate increases for a while longer.

Stockholm
Most analysts expect the Swedish Central Bank (Riksbank) to increase its key policy rate by 0.50 points on February 9. Photo by Fredrik Öhlander on Unsplash

Next week, interest rate increases are expected from the Federal Reserve System (FED), the European Central Bank (ECB), and the Bank of England – and the Swedish Central Bank (Riksbank) is expected to follow suit.

Signs that the unusually high inflation in the United States is beginning to moderate means that the American central bank, the FED, is now expected to slow down the pace of interest rate increases.

The first interest rate announcement of the year from FED chief Jerome Powell and his board on Wednesday is, according to the average forecast among analysts, expected to amount to an increase of 0.25 percentage points – to a total of 4.50-4.75.

Eight raises in a row

If that turns out to be the case, the FED will have raised interest rates at eight meetings in a row. As recently as December, it was adjusted up 0.50 to a 15-year high – following a historic streak of three consecutive rate meetings with 0.75 percentage point hikes.

In order to end interest rate hikes, Powell wants, among other things, to see more reactions in the economy, especially when it comes to the labour market in the United States.

The ECB and its chief, Christine Lagarde, have put a lot of effort into sounding hawkish in the run-up to the interest rate announcement on Thursday. Among other things, they stated that there might be several increases of 0.50 percentage points this year.

This is also the average forecast for their colleagues at the Bank of England in London, which are also expected to announce that they will raise the policy rate by 0.50 points on Thursday.

Increase expected in Sweden

On Thursday, February 9, Erik Thedéen’s first interest rate meeting at the Riksbank since he took over as Riksbank governor at the turn of the year will take place.

Most analysts expect an increase in the policy rate of 0.50 points.

“The journey to the Riksbank’s two percent target is long,” Handelsbanken’s chief economist Christina Nyman noted when she presented a new economic forecast this week.

Her main scenario is another increase from the Riksbank in April to a key interest rate of 3.25 before there is a pause in interest rate increases.

Nordea’s economists also expect 3.25 to be the peak in the interest rate cycle we are in now. But their colleagues at Swedbank believe that, on top of this, there will be another increase in the policy rate this summer, to 3.50.

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PROPERTY

For sale: New record as flood of apartments hits the market in Sweden

A flood of new homes are being listed as up for sale in Sweden as sellers and buyers eagerly hope for an imminent interest rate cut.

For sale: New record as flood of apartments hits the market in Sweden

A record number of apartments were available on Sweden’s main property listings site last month.

A total of 32,233 apartments were listed for sale on Hemnet in April, 40 percent more than the same month last year and the highest number ever for a single month. A lot of these ads are however for upcoming sales rather than apartments that are already up for public viewings.

“The high supply is an effect of a long period of a sluggish market rather than a risk factor for new price drops. This spring we’ve been seeing both rising prices and more activity. Especially as a result of the fact that we appear to be at peak interest rate and that the first interest cut is drawing near,” writes Hemnet market analyst Erik Holmberg in a comment quoted by Swedish news agency TT.

ESSENTIAL TIPS:

The previous record month was October 2023, when a total of 31,985 ads were posted on Hemnet.

The Local has previously reported that Swedish property prices are also on the rise as the market kicks into action.

A major reason behind the flood of apartments for sale is the expectation that Sweden’s central bank, the Riksbank, will soon slash the country’s main interest rate. While this is expected to bump up prices, it is on the other hand also likely to lead to lower mortgage rates.

EXPLAINED:

The Riksbank will announce its next decision on Wednesday.

This is a crucial announcement as the so-called policy rate is the bank’s main monetary policy tool. It decides which rates Swedish banks can deposit in and borrow money from the Riksbank, which in turn affects the banks’ own interest rates on savings, loans and mortgages. 

Sweden’s policy rate is relatively high at the moment, 4.0 percent (the highest since 2008), because of the Riksbank trying to bring down inflation. If bank interest rates are high, it’s expensive to borrow money, which means people spend less and as a result inflation drops.

But now that inflation is on its way down, Riksbank chiefs themselves have said that they think it’s likely that they will cut the policy rate in either May or June, and several economists predict that the cut is going to come sooner rather than later, which would mean this week.

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