Illustration of Colombia's central bank governor announcing unchanged interest rates amid rising inflation, with President Petro's reaction inset.
Illustration of Colombia's central bank governor announcing unchanged interest rates amid rising inflation, with President Petro's reaction inset.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Banco de la República keeps interest rate at 9.25%

AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

The Banco de la República decided to keep the interest rate at 9.25% for October 2025, citing inflation rising for the third consecutive month. President Gustavo Petro reacted by stating that rates will only fall with the next board appointment. Manager Leonardo Villar clarified that the next appointment is scheduled for February 2029.

The board of directors of the Banco de la República announced on October 31, 2025, that the policy intervention rate will remain at 9.25%, a level stable since April this year. This decision was made in the seventh meeting of the year, following a previous 25 basis point cut. Four codirectors voted to maintain it, two for a 50 basis point reduction, and one for 25 basis points.

Total inflation in September rose to 5.2%, the same as at the end of 2024, for the third consecutive month, while core inflation stayed at 4.8%. Inflation expectations, from surveys and the public debt market, exceed 3% for the next two years. The bank highlighted the dynamism of internal demand, driven by private and public consumption, and a rebound in investment in machinery and civil works. Externally, financial conditions have eased due to U.S. rate cuts, though the trade deficit is widening from higher imports.

President Gustavo Petro commented: "the interest rate will only fall when we choose the next member of the Banco de la República's board." Villar replied: "the next scheduled appointment of a board member will be in February 2029," and denied knowledge of resignations. Three 2021 codirectors—Bibiana Taboada, Jaime Jaramillo-Vallejo, and Mauricio Villamizar—end their terms this year, but there are no signs of immediate vacancies.

The technical team projects 2.6% growth for 2025 and 2.9% in 2026, with inflation approaching 3% in 2027. Analysts like Jackeline Piraján from Scotiabank Colpatria explained that high rates encourage saving over excessive credit, stabilizing instruments like CDTs. The Ministry of Hacienda insists on a gap between the real rate and the neutral rate that would allow cuts to reactivate the economy. Some experts, like Skandia, anticipate a possible cut to 9% by year-end, but most expect stability.

관련 기사

Banco de la República board unanimously holds interest rate at 11.25% in meeting with Finance Minister amid inflation and political tensions.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Banco de la República unanimously holds interest rate at 11.25%, defying hike expectations amid government tensions

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

In its May 1, 2026 board meeting, Banco de la República unanimously kept the benchmark interest rate at 11.25%, surprising analysts expecting a hike to combat accelerating inflation. Finance Minister Germán Ávila participated fully, citing constructive dialogue, while board members justified the decision to maintain stability amid political pressures.

Following its January hike to 10.25%, Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by another 100 basis points to 11.25% in a tight 4-3 vote during its second meeting of the year. Finance Minister Germán Ávila walked out of the board meeting and announced the government's withdrawal from the central bank over disagreements. President Gustavo Petro backed the move and criticized the monetary policy.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Technical manager Hernando Vargas presented the Banco de la República's Monetary Policy Report, highlighting the interest rate hike and lower-than-expected GDP growth.

President Gustavo Petro blamed the Banco de la República's high interest rates for the housing sector's contraction, which has seen 10 consecutive quarters of decline. The leader stated that these positive and growing real rates have prevented users from affording payments. Analysts, however, emphasize the drop in social interest housing as the main factor.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Leonardo Villar, general manager of Banco de la República, and Germán Ávila, finance minister, clashed in a political oversight debate on the fiscal impact of recent interest rate hikes. Villar defended the bank's autonomy and criticized government discrediting. Ávila responded by highlighting his guerrilla past and questioning Colombia's rate increases compared to other countries.

In the latest clash amid tensions with Banco de la República over rate hikes, Colombia's Finance Minister Germán Ávila held a monetary policy forum without central bank Governor Leonardo Villar—who declined over timing concerns—and slammed the recent 200 basis-point increase for curbing 2026 growth to 2.6% while boosting public debt interest by $1.8 trillion.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Banco Central president Gabriel Galípolo called for caution in Brazil's interest rate policy on Monday amid global uncertainties from the Iran war. Speaking at a seminar in Rio de Janeiro, he stressed taking safer steps to address inflation pressures. Former BC president Arminio Fraga criticized the government's fiscal policy for not supporting the central bank.

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부