(Repeats story published on Oct 31)
* Czech c.bank expected to cut by 25 bps on Nov. 6
* Some analysts see 50 bps move
* Further easing to come by end of Q1/2009
By Jana Mlcochova and Mirka Krufova
PRAGUE (Reuters) - The Czech central bank is likely to chop interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point as inflation risks fade and growth slumps due to the crisis in west European economies, a Reuters poll showed on Friday.
All 17 analysts in the poll, taken between Oct. 29 and 31, said the central bank (CNB) would cut at its Nov. 6 meeting.
Thirteen predicted a 25 basis point reduction, bringing the main interest rate to 3.25 percent, back to a level from August last year and a second cut after an initial easing this August.
A weaker crown is likely to prevent policy makers from a bigger cut for now but interest rates will continue head another quarter-point south by the end of the first quarter 2009 and to 2.75 percent a year from now, the poll showed.
That will keep Czech rates lowest in the region, a huge discount to Hungary which has hiked to 11.5 percent under an attack on its currency.
The lowering could bring the Czech cost of money in line with the euro zone if the European Central Bank (ECB), whose policymakers meet on the same day as the Czech ones, cuts its benchmark rate by 50 basis points as expected [
].Poland is expected to keep its rates unchanged at 6 percent until the end of the first quarter next year.
The crown <EURCZK=> has experienced high volatility over the past weeks, oscillating between 26.25 and 23.70 per euro as growing risk aversion prompted investors sell emerging market assets only to return upon an IMF bailout of Hungary. It traded at 24.260 on Friday afternoon.
"With levels around 24 crowns, the CNB can consider a gradual reduction of rates by 50 basis points, (but) with an exchange rate above 26 crowns it can be solving the question, whether to change rates at all," said Petr Sklenar, an analyst at Atlantik FT.
"Therefore currently we expect a cut by 25 bps," he said.
Four economists in the poll assumed the bank would cut rates by 50 basis points.
"The economic case for 50 bps centres on growth, the fact that both domestic and European business confidence surveys point to an exceptionally sharp slowdown in activity ahead, as do equities," said Lucy Bethell of the Royal Bank of Scotland.
INFLATION, GROWTH OUTLOOK TO DROP
Czech inflation stood at 6.6 percent in September, high above the bank's tolerance band of +/-1 percentage point around a 3 percent target, but was below the bank's 7.0 percent forecast.
The bank assumes prices will fall to 2.5 percent at the end of 2009 as growth slows, commodity prices drop and an effect from one-off tax hikes earlier this year fades.
Economists say the bank is likely to cut the outlook for prices as well as growth, now at 3.6 percent, in a quarterly projection due to be released at the meeting as the latest market turmoil caps growth in the euro zone, Czech Republic's main trading partner, and helps slash commodity prices.
Jiri Skop of Komercni Banka pointed to the bank's latest forecast assumptions which include a Brent oil <CLOc1> price at $148 next year, while it traded at 61.67 on Friday, and euro zone growth of 1.3 percent, while a latest Reuters poll showed the euro zone growth at 0.4 percent next year [
]."Only from these two factors it's evident that the CNB will have to revise downward its forecast of the economic growth and inflation and thus also a trajectory for interest rates," he said.
For TABLE with analyst forecasts....[
]