- Pakistan cenbank had held policy for four consecutive meetings
- Move surprises markets; all analysts expected a hold
- Core inflation still sticky
- FY26 GDP growth seen in upper half of 3.25%–4.25% range
- IMF warns against premature easing, urges data-dependent policy
KARACHI, Pakistan, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Pakistan's central bank cut its key interest rate by 50 basis points to 10.5% on Monday, breaking a four-meeting hold in a surprise move it said was aimed at supporting sustainable economic growth while keeping inflation within target.
All 12 analysts in a Reuters poll had expected the State Bank of Pakistan to hold the policy rate at 11%, especially after the International Monetary Fund warned against premature easing under Pakistan's $7 billion loan programme.
The central bank said the real policy rate remained sufficient to stabilise inflation over the medium term, underscoring the need for coordinated fiscal and monetary policy and continued structural reforms.
It said inflation averaged within its 5%-7% target range during the July-November period of fiscal year 2026, which ends next June, despite "sticky" core inflation.
It added that the outlook was broadly unchanged, though inflation could rise temporarily toward the end of FY26 due to base effects before returning to target in the next fiscal year.
GROWTH MOMENTUM BUILDS
The SBP said economic activity was picking up, citing stronger-than-expected growth in large-scale manufacturing.
It kept its FY26 growth outlook in the upper half of its 3.25%-4.25% range, while flagging risks from a challenging global environment.
Monday's reduction takes the total easing since rates peaked at 22% in 2023 to 1,150 basis points. The SBP had delivered 1,100 bps of cuts between June 2024 and May 2025 and then held the rate steady for four meetings before Monday's move.
"The 50-bps cut was a major surprise and signals an intent to support faster economic growth," said Fawad Basir, head of research at KTrade. He added that stronger reserves might have "eased concerns over the rupee and the current account deficit", which had "underpinned expectations of an unchanged stance".
FX BUFFERS IMPROVE
Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves have risen above $15.8 billion following a $1.2 billion IMF disbursement after the completion of programme reviews. The central bank projects reserves to reach $17.8 billion by June 2026, assuming planned inflows materialise.
"The (rate) decision appears well-justified given prevailing macroeconomic conditions," said Shahid Habib, chief executive of Arif Habib Ltd.
An IMF staff report last week warned against premature easing by the major South Asian nation, calling for policy to remain data-dependent to anchor expectations and rebuild external buffers.
Reporting by Ariba Shahid and Asif Shahzad; Editing by YP Rajesh and Mark Heinrich
Source: Reuters