(Repeats story published late on Thursday)
PRAGUE, Aug 6 (Reuters) - The following are selected comments by Czech central bank (CNB) Governor Zdenek Tuma at a news conference on Thursday.
The CNB cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point to a new low of 1.25 percent, surprising some in the market who had expected stable policy.
Eleven out of 20 analysts polled by Reuters had expected no rate move, and the rest had forecast the cut.
For a news report on the decision, click on [
].
ON INFLATION FORECAST
"The outcome of the new forecast is that the inflation outlook is lower for the nearest quarters which are relevant for making monetary policy decisions.
"We expect inflation to drop further in the course of this year, and during next year it will gradually approach the target of 2 percent."
ON THE ECONOMIC DECLINE
"The economic development behind the forecast has not changed fundamentally compared with the previous forecast, but we are getting lower trajectories.
"We assume that the Czech economy has already shrunk, mainly in the first quarter of this year.
"The decline reached the bottom in the second quarter and later we expect a very gradual recovery. We will however keep seeing quite poor numbers across the economy in year-on-year figures."
"But in month-on-month or quarter-on-quarter numbers, the situation should already look better."
ON CROWN, MARKET INTEREST RATES
"We assume in the forecast that (the crown) will slowly appreciate over the forecast horizon.
"We expect (market interest rates) will remain at low levels, they will drop a little more this year, and return to growth during 2010, mainly in the second half."
"In the external environment... this time it is apparent, that the development is in the anti-inflationary direction in all the key parametres.
"There is, on the contrary, a change toward higher values for oil. Oil is a certain pro-inflationary factor."
IS THIS THE BOTTOM?
"This is a valid (question) and it is not the first time we have talked about it here... Where is the bottom for interest rates? The bottom is zero. So we still have room to manoeuvre."
"Despite (the fact) there has been a change in sentiment and there is certain optimism.... that still does not mean that the recession (cannot) be longer or that the decline (cannot) be deeper than expected."
"In such a case... the Czech central bank still has 1.25 percentage points room to manoeuvre."
ON HOUSEHOLD DEMAND:
"We expect that it will be slowing down in the rest of 2009 and can even drop into negative levels in 2010, that was a subject of debate today."
"Behind this is a drop in households' disposable income and growing unemployment."
"On the other hand there were arguments that there has been a decline in the population's savings level and that people may have the tendency to keep consumption at a certain level."
ON INTEREST RATE DIFFERENTIAL WITH EURO ZONE
"A decline in interest rates in 2009 is consistent with the forecast, and then a certain rise, mainly in the second half of 2010."
"Although we are counting on that, the positive interest rate differential will be closing." "Nevertheless, even when we swing back into a negative interest differential, which should happen in 2010, we are counting that it will not have any fundamental impact on the exchange rate." (Reporting by Jan Lopatka and Martin Dokoupil; Editing by Michael Winfrey)