(Bloomberg) — Thailand’s economic outlook is worsening after the deadly March 28 Myanmar earthquake, adding to pressure for another interest rate cut next month to support the sluggish economy, according to analysts.
Most Read from Bloomberg
The earthquake, which killed at least 1,700 in Myanmar, violently shook Bangkok, where at least 18 people died. More than 70 workers are missing at the site of a building that collapsed while under construction. Thailand’s benchmark stock index fell as much as 1.7% on Monday, weighed by property and financial shares.
While Thailand escaped the devastation wrought upon Myanmar, the earthquake was still bad news. Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy already faces headwinds from US President Donald Trump’s trade war, a mountain of household debt and lower-than-expected bookings from Chinese tourists, while factory output fell for a seventh straight month in February on poor auto sales.
“Thailand’s economic outlook was already dim from all the surrounding negative factors and the earthquake just made it even worse,” said Nattaporn Triratanasirikul, an economist at Bangkok-based Kasikorn Research Center Co. “This raises the chance of a back-to-back rate cut at April’s meeting and possibly one more cut in the second half of the year.”
The BOT unexpectedly cut rates in February and October to support the economy, but despite that shift away from a hawkish stance, it has been hesitant to commit to a full-blown easing cycle despite political pressure for more cuts.
Standard Chartered Plc said in a report Monday that as the Bank of Thailand has insisted its monetary policy is “outlook dependent,” the worsening picture raises the chance of an April rate reduction.
“A policy rate cut may be one of the options” considered by the central bank, Citi Research said in a separate report, suggesting the BOT may ask banks and non-bank financial institutions to provide more support for clients.
Read: Thailand Reassures Investors as Markets Reopen After Quake
Kasikorn Research estimates an immediate economic impact of around 20 billion baht ($590 million) from the quake, mainly from a slump in month-end spending on food and services after millions of Bangkok people fled for their lives on Friday.
The central bank has instructed financial institutions to extend special debt relief for disaster-affected borrowers, similar to measures implemented due to floods a year ago, Bank of Thailand Deputy Governor Roong Mallikamas said at a briefing in Bangkok. Its Monetary Policy Committee will next meet on April 30.