By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
MFM.news
  • Majalah
    • Majalah Online
    • Terkini
    • Fundamental
    • Strategi
    • Aktiviti
    • Teknikal Analisis
  • Pilihan Editor
  • Mengenai Broker
    • Broker Forex Malaysia
    • Bonus Tanpa Deposit
    • Buka Akaun Forex
    • Copytrade Forex
  • Platform Dagangan
Reading: Thai banks’ interest rate hikes spark economic concerns
Sign In
Breaking:
Rizab Asing Jepun Jatuh Sedikit pada Mei
Ekonomi Ireland Meningkat 9.7% pada S1
Won Korea Selatan Mengukuh Di Tengah-tengah Ketenangan Politik dan Optimisme Perdagangan Global
Euro Teguh Mendahului Pemotongan Kadar ECB
Keluaran Perindustrian Tahunan Sepanyol Meningkat 0.6% pada April
MFM.newsMFM.news
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Majalah
    • Majalah Online
    • Terkini
    • Fundamental
    • Strategi
    • Aktiviti
    • Teknikal Analisis
  • Pilihan Editor
  • Mengenai Broker
    • Broker Forex Malaysia
    • Bonus Tanpa Deposit
    • Buka Akaun Forex
    • Copytrade Forex
  • Platform Dagangan
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© MajalahForexMalaysia - All rights reserved.
MFM.news > Blog > Berita Terkini > Thai banks’ interest rate hikes spark economic concerns
Berita Terkini

Thai banks’ interest rate hikes spark economic concerns

Last updated: October 7, 2022 12:48 am
By shahrulsohaimi
7 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Major commercial banks in Thailand have rushed to raise interest rates in response to the Bank of Thailand’s two consecutive rate hikes, sparking concern over rising financial costs that will eventually be passed on to businesses and consumers at a time when the Thai economy is still in the recovery stage from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Bangkok Bank, Thailand’s biggest lender, raised its lending rate by 30 to 40 basis points (0.30% to 0.40%) and increased its deposit rate by 15 to 50 basis points on Sept 29, immediately following suit on the Bank of Thailand’s policy rate hike on Sept 28.

Kasikorn Bank on Friday also raised its lending rate by 25 basis points, and other major banks are expected to go in the same direction due to rising costs caused by higher short-term interest rates in the market.

The Bank of Thailand raised its policy rate by 25 basis points in August, and another 25 basis points in September. Commercial banks’ hikes were mostly smaller than the central bank’s, as they have been adhering to the government’s message not to raise rates too much or too fast.

The government has asked for cooperation from state-owned banks – including the publicly listed Krung Thai Bank, the Government Saving Bank, the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives, and the Government Housing Bank – to keep their rates unchanged until the end of the year in order to help reduce the impact on small and medium-size enterprises and vulnerable groups.

The request has exerted indirect pressure on commercial banks as well, resulting in their relatively small interest rate hikes.

Yet the gradual hikes have raised concern among business sectors that increasing financial costs could weigh on the Thai economy, which has not yet fully recovered after being hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic, at a time when there are risks lying ahead, particularly the weaker Thai baht, a larger trade deficit and swollen household debt.

Industrial sectors in particular “have had higher costs immediately, and that will definitely have a negative impact on their operation and profit”, said Kriengkrai Thiennukul, chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries (FTI).

He said some sectors that rely heavily on massive capital outlays and loans are expected to be adversely affected, including construction, land developers, electronics industries, renewable energy and the petrochemical sector.

“What we are concerned about the most is small and medium enterprises,” he said, adding that SMEs largely have smaller capital resources and cash flows and are likely to face a liquidity crunch caused by rising interest rates.

Kriengkrai said although the FTI agreed with the BOT on increasing the policy rate in order to curb inflation, rising financial costs at a time when the country is facing other risks could weigh on the economy.

The Thai economy grew 2.4% in the first half of 2022 due largely to hefty exports and rebounding tourism, supported by a weaker baht and the government’s policy of fully reopening the country to foreign tourists.

However, the baht, which has dropped to a 16-year low of more than 37 per dollar, has caused alarm in business sectors, particularly leading importers of capital goods to hold back orders, and the effects of those reductions in spending on production should in turn lead exports to slow over the next few months.

Analysts said the baht is likely to continue weakening because the gap between Thai and US interest rates is big enough to spur capital outflows that drag the Thai currency down.

However, a weaker baht is likely to benefit the tourism industry, which accounts for around 18% of the country’s gross domestic product, by making Thailand cheaper for visitors. The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) expects around 7 million to 10 million foreign tourists to visit the kingdom this year. Still, that is well below the 39 million tourists in 2019, before the country was hit by the pandemic.

The depreciating baht is also expected to worsen the country’s trade deficit.

Despite the hefty exports, Thailand had a trade deficit of 420 billion baht in the first seven months of this year, the highest level in 27 years, due largely to a weaker baht that made imports of capital goods and energy more expensive, and the rising trade deficit is expected to weigh further on the baht.

Apart from the weaker currency, an additional risk is rising household debt that dampens the economy. Thailand’s household debt stands at 14.8 trillion baht so far this year, accounting for 88% of GDP, a level that raised the alarm for the Bank of Thailand to take action.

BOT governor Sethaput Suthiwarnarueput said the central bank will monitor commercial banks very closely to make sure they do not launch campaigns to encourage consumers to borrow for unnecessary purchases, in order to keep household debt in check at a time when interest rates are on a rising trend.

The central bank will also monitor the spread between deposit and lending rates so they are not too wide, to avoid causing big financial burdens on small and medium-size enterprises.

Beyond this, the FTI has demanded government policies that would help businesses absorb the rising financial burden from higher interest rates at a time when the economy remains wobbly.

“We want the government to issue some debt rehabilitation project or some soft loan for SMEs, particularly those who had liquidity crunches, to allow them to continue their business operations,” said Kriengkrai of the FTI.- FMT


Anda Pasti Sukakan Ini

Kadar baru BR,BLR Maybank dinaikan mulai Jumaat 8 Julai

Panasonic Malaysia menutup 2 jabatan pembuatan di kilang Shah Alam dalam langkah penstrukturan semula

US DOLLAR MENGUKUH SEBAIK SAHAJA KONGRES U.S BERSETUJU UNTUK MENYOKONG PAKEJ RANSANGAN TERBARU

Analisa Teknikal EurUsd 22 Feb 2022

JELAJAH SEMINAR XM 2019: MELAKA & TERENGGANU

TAGGED:Thai Interest RateThailand EconomyThailand News
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Glad you finished the article! How do you feel about it?
Love0
Happy0
Surprise0
Embarrass0
Sleepy0
Sad0
Angry0
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


More like this

Perpecahan Trump-Musk: Perseteruan Terbuka Goncang Dunia Politik dan Ekonomi
June 6, 2025
LHDN Umum Penangguhan Pelaksanaan e-Invois untuk Usahawan Berpendapatan Bawah RM5 Juta ke Tahun 2026
June 6, 2025
Petronas Kurangkan 10 Peratus Pekerja, Lebih 5,000 Bakal Terlibat
June 6, 2025
Rizab Asing Jepun Jatuh Sedikit pada Mei
June 6, 2025
Ekonomi Ireland Meningkat 9.7% pada S1
June 5, 2025
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Artikel menarik untuk anda

Berita TerkiniMENARIK HARI INI!StrategiTeknikal

Analisa Teknikal GbpJpy 16 May 2022

By Zulhilmi Mohd Diah
1 Min Read
Berita Terkini

Apa kebendanya Jana Wibawa ni?.

By Fatin Zulaikha
3 Min Read
Berita Terkini

Korea Utara melepaskan beberapa misil peluru berpandu balistik menjelang pilihan raya AS

By Fatin Zulaikha
3 Min Read

Segalanya di Majalah Forex Malaysia

Berita Terkini

FBM KLCI Dijangka Bergerak Dalam Julat Tidak Menentu – Pelabur Disaran Waspada Menjelang Minggu Singkat Perdagangan

By Azawiya Azali
May 31, 2025
4 Min Read

USD Melemah Membantu Ringgit Makin Mengukuh

By Fatin Zulaikha
May 7, 2025
Berita Terkini

Ekonomi Malaysia Kehilangan Momentum Suku Pertama 2025,Dijangka Berterusan Sepanjang Tahun

By Azawiya Azali
May 16, 2025
3 Min Read
Majalah Online

MAJALAH FOREX MALAYSIA EDISI KE 335 SEDIA UNTUK DIMUAT TURUN PERCUMA

By MFM Team
0 Min Read
- Advertisement -
Ad image
News Ticker

Kadar Inflasi Mongolia Menurun pada Mac

Kadar inflasi tahunan di Mongolia perlahan kepada 9.1% pada Mac 2025 daripada paras tertinggi hampir satu…

By MFM News Update
April 10, 2025
AktivitiBerita Terkini

Wiki Finance Expo Johannesburg 2025: Africa’s Premier Fintech, Crypto & Forex Event!

Johannesburg, 16 August 2025 — The highly anticipated Wiki Finance Expo Johannesburg 2025 is set to take…

By Azawiya Azali
April 20, 2025
News Ticker

USD/JPY: Dolar Tembus ¥150.00 apabila Kenaikan Harga Mendahului di tengah-tengah Optimisme Tarif

Di bahagian negeri, Rumah Putih berkemungkinan akan mengetepikan beberapa tarif khusus industri pada 2 April. Di…

By MFM News Update
March 26, 2025
News Ticker

Aktiviti Ekonomi di Georgia Meningkat

Pertumbuhan aktiviti ekonomi Georgia meningkat kepada 9% tahun ke tahun pada Mac 2025, daripada 7.7% pada…

By MFM News Update
April 30, 2025
MFM.news

MFM.news adalah laman interaktif bagi komuniti forex di Malaysia, Brunei dan Indonesia. Di MFM anda boleh dapatkan informasi terkini berkaitan forex, isu semasa, dan pasaran kewangan secara amnya. Terdapat juga promosi hebat daripada forex broker di Malaysia dikongsi di laman ini.

Lain-Lain

  • Laman Utama
  • Peluang Dagangan
  • Berita Terkini
  • Belajar Forex

Korporat

  • Profil
  • Perkhidmatan
  • Majalah Online
  • Hubungi Kami

© 2025 MFM.news – All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up