Economy Strong Israel GDP and inflation may lead to 75 bps rate hike By Reuters August 17, 2022, 5:42 AM Creative Commons The central bank, headed by governor Amir Yaron, projects Israeli economic growth of 5 percent in 2022 after a more than eight percent spurt last year Policymakers have lifted the key rate to 1.25% since AprilGoldman Sach expects a three-quarter point hike at upcoming meetingSecond-quarter GDP growth was led by gains in exports and private A sharp rebound in Israel’s economic activity and a jump in annual inflation have made a 0.75-point interest rate increase more likely next week, analysts said on Tuesday. The central bank had looked headed for a second straight half-point move at its upcoming August 22 policy meeting, but data showed stronger than expected economic growth in the second quarter a day after a further uptick in prices. “Economic activity remains strong and alongside the red-hot inflation figures for July, the risks are skewed to a 75 basis point rate hike,” said Liam Peach, emerging markets economist at Capital Economics. GDP grew an annualised 6.8 percent in the second quarter from the first quarter, versus an expected 2.8 percent in a Reuters poll and after a revised downward contraction of 2.7 percent in the prior three months. That followed figures on Monday showing the annual inflation rate jumped to 5.2 percent in July, its highest level since October 2008, from 4.4 percent in June. The central bank, headed by governor Amir Yaron, projects Israeli economic growth of 5 percent in 2022 after a more than 8 percent spurt last year. It also sees an inflation rate of 4.5 percent this year, above an official 1-3 percent annual target, but easing to 2.4 percent in 2023. Low Inflation Inflation in Israel is still far below Western levels, but with prices rising rapidly and anger growing among Israelis, the cost of living has become a main issue for candidates running in the Nov. 1 general election. Citi economist Michel Nies said he now foresees another 150 basis points of tightening through the rest of 2022, with a possibility of a three-quarters point move next week, and more hikes in 2023 that would increase the risk of a “policy-induced downturn” in economic activity. Goldman Sach economist Tadas Gedminas also said he expects a three-quarter point hike at the upcoming meeting instead of a half-point. Since April, policymakers have lifted the key rate to 1.25 percent, the last move a half-point increase in early July, from 0.1 percent in April. The last time the Bank of Israel moved by three-quarters of a point was a rate reduction in early 2009. It last hiked rates by at least that amount in mid-2002. Second-quarter gross domestic product growth in the second quarter was led by 10 percent gains in both exports and private spending, while investment rose 7.7 percent and government spending gained 5 percent. “This is a strong print supporting our assessment that economic activity remains strong in Israel,” said Leader Capital Markets Chief Economist Jonathan Katz, adding the latest data mean “a greater chance for a 0.75 percent hike”.