SHARE
COPY LINK

MONEY

Swedish central bank chief: Economy entering ‘new phase’

Erik Thedéen, governor of Sweden's central bank, the Riksbank, believes that the country's "surprisingly resilient" economy is entering a new phase after a few years of inflation and rising interest rates.

Swedish central bank chief: Economy entering 'new phase'
Riksbank governor Erik Thedéen at an event on May 17th. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

“Concerns remain, but from an inflation perspective, prospects look much brighter,” Thedéen said at an event at the Swedish Economic Association. “We are entering a new phase for monetary policy and for the Swedish economy, as inflation is now back close to the [two percent] target, which among other things enables real wage increases.”

Earlier in May, the central bank lowered the policy rate by 0.25 percentage points to 3.75 percent – the first time the rate has dropped in eight years, after a period of eight hikes between 2022 and 2023, where the rate rose from 0 to 4 percent.

These hikes were made in order to lower inflation, which at its highest point in December 2022 stood at 10.2 percent.

“The upturn [in inflation] was partly due to a series of global supply shocks that led to sharp cost increases for companies, and partly due to a large pent-up consumption need among households after the pandemic, and thus high demand,” he said.

“Together, these factors in turn contributed to a change in the nature of companies’ pricing behaviour. This manifested itself in more frequent price increases and a greater pass-through from cost increases to price increases.”

The most recent inflation figures from March and April this year put inflation at 2.2 and 2.3 percent, much closer to the central bank’s 2 percent target.

“We now know that inflation is by no means ‘dead’, as it was sometimes labelled when inflation was below the central banks’ inflation targets for a long period,” Thedéen said, before warning that prices may be more prone to increasing now than they were in the past.

“The threshold for raising prices may be lower now than it was before. For monetary policy, it will be important to monitor price-setting indicators,” he added.

He warned that we may not yet have seen the full impact of the hikes to the country’s policy rate, while describing the Swedish economy as “surprisingly resilient so far”.

“Interest rate-sensitive parts of the Swedish economy have of course been affected by the rate hikes. Household consumption has declined and residential investment has fallen sharply. But at an aggregate level, this has been offset by the relatively better performance of other parts of the economy.”

One factor behind this resilience, he said, was the high demand for labour.

“This may reflect the fact that companies have not anticipated a deep or prolonged downturn in economic activity and that real wages have been weak.”

Things are definitely looking brighter, but we may not be out of the woods just yet, he warned.

“There are some questions about what has happened to the structural economic relationships after the years of high inflation and, as always, there are risks of worse developments ahead. But so far, a ‘soft landing’ seems to be within reach.”

Member comments

  1. Cash is Freedom, Tech obsessed Swedes are blindly walking into digital Orwellian tyranny. Say no to the globalist elite and CBDC

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

MONEY

Stockholm exchange fined 100 million kronor for insider trading lapses

Sweden's financial watchdog said on Wednesday it had fined the Stockholm stock exchange 100 million kronor for failing to detect and report suspected insider trading.

Stockholm exchange fined 100 million kronor for insider trading lapses

The Financial Supervisory Authority (FSA) said it had investigated “four major company events in 2021 and 2022”, as well as two other cases of trading of financial instruments in 2022 and 2023.

“The investigations show that, in conjunction with the four company events, there have been deficiencies in how Nasdaq Stockholm has conducted its trading monitoring, which should prevent, identify and report insider dealing,” the FSA said in a statement.

The four companies were identified as food retail company ICA, Lundin Energy, tobacco producer Swedish Match and vehicle safety product maker Haldex.

“The investigations also show that Nasdaq Stockholm on two occasions initiated trading in financial instruments in violation of the regulatory framework,” the FSA added.

The authority said the violations were not serious enough to warrant withdrawing the exchange’s authorisation.

It said it was therefore issuing “a remark and an administrative fine of 100 million kronor”.

“Exchanges must comply with the regulations that exist to prevent, detect and report insider trading. It is ultimately about confidence in the financial market,” FSA director general Daniel Barr said.

Nasdaq Stockholm said in a statement to AFP that it took the matter “very seriously”.

“We maintain our position that we had sufficient capabilities to detect insider dealings,” it said, adding that it would assess the FSA’s “interpretation of our obligations and its implications.”

SHOW COMMENTS