<p>Oslo: Norway's central bank cut its policy interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.25 per cent on Thursday and said there were more cuts to come due to a more benign inflation outlook, a decision that took most analysts by surprise and weakened the currency.</p><p>"The economic outlook is uncertain, but if the economy evolves broadly as currently projected, the policy rate will be reduced further in the course of 2025," Norges Bank said in a statement.</p><p>The policy rate could be cut one or two more times by the end of the year, Governor Ida Wolden Bache later told a press conference, lowering borrowing costs to either 4.0 per cent or 3.75 per cent.</p><p>By the end of 2028 the rate will likely stand at about 3 per cent, Norges Bank said. Thursday's cut was the first since 2020.</p><p>The Norwegian crown initially weakened to 11.56 against the euro from 11.48 just before the 0800 GMT announcement, but regained lost ground to trade at 11.50 at 0858 GMT.</p>.Rupee falls 14 paise to 86.57 against US dollar in early trade.<p>Norges Bank had held its interest rate last month at 4.50 per cent, the highest level since 2008, after postponing in March a long-planned monetary easing due to an unexpected rise in consumer prices.</p><p>Of the 26 economists in <em>Reuters</em>' June 11-16 poll, 23 had forecast that Norges Bank's key interest rate would stay at 4.50 per cent on Thursday, while only three predicted a cut to 4.25 per cent.</p><p>"Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected," Bache said in a statement.</p><p>"A cautious normalisation of the policy rate will pave the way for inflation to return to target without restricting the economy more than necessary," she added.</p><p>Core inflation in Norway eased more than expected in May, slowing to 2.8 per cent year-on-year, but remained above the central bank's 2.0 per cent target.</p>.Families of 737 crash victims urge rejection of Boeing deal.<p><strong>Norway's PM welcomes move</strong></p><p>The rate decision comes ahead of a parliamentary election in September, with latest polls suggesting that the minority Labour government may be re-elected.</p><p>In a rare public statement after a central bank rate decision, Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere welcomed the move.</p><p>"This is especially good news for everyone with loans," Stoere told news agency NTB.</p><p>The Norwegian policy stance has so far contrasted with other Western central banks, most of which started cutting rates last year as growth slowed and inflation waned.</p><p>"The central bank remains vigilant: if wage and price growth remain higher than projected, there will be fewer interest rate cuts," Oeystein Doerum, chief economist at the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprises, said in a statement.</p>.Stock markets decline in early trade on weak global peers amid Middle East tensions.<p>The Swiss central bank on Thursday cut its policy rate to zero, citing negative inflation and a cloudy global outlook.</p><p>Sweden similarly cut its policy rate on Wednesday, by a quarter point to 2.0 per cent, citing economic weakening, while the US Federal Reserve kept rates steady. Both central banks said they may further reduce borrowing costs later this year.</p><p>Britain's central bank is expected to keep interest rates on hold later on Thursday.</p>
<p>Oslo: Norway's central bank cut its policy interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.25 per cent on Thursday and said there were more cuts to come due to a more benign inflation outlook, a decision that took most analysts by surprise and weakened the currency.</p><p>"The economic outlook is uncertain, but if the economy evolves broadly as currently projected, the policy rate will be reduced further in the course of 2025," Norges Bank said in a statement.</p><p>The policy rate could be cut one or two more times by the end of the year, Governor Ida Wolden Bache later told a press conference, lowering borrowing costs to either 4.0 per cent or 3.75 per cent.</p><p>By the end of 2028 the rate will likely stand at about 3 per cent, Norges Bank said. Thursday's cut was the first since 2020.</p><p>The Norwegian crown initially weakened to 11.56 against the euro from 11.48 just before the 0800 GMT announcement, but regained lost ground to trade at 11.50 at 0858 GMT.</p>.Rupee falls 14 paise to 86.57 against US dollar in early trade.<p>Norges Bank had held its interest rate last month at 4.50 per cent, the highest level since 2008, after postponing in March a long-planned monetary easing due to an unexpected rise in consumer prices.</p><p>Of the 26 economists in <em>Reuters</em>' June 11-16 poll, 23 had forecast that Norges Bank's key interest rate would stay at 4.50 per cent on Thursday, while only three predicted a cut to 4.25 per cent.</p><p>"Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected," Bache said in a statement.</p><p>"A cautious normalisation of the policy rate will pave the way for inflation to return to target without restricting the economy more than necessary," she added.</p><p>Core inflation in Norway eased more than expected in May, slowing to 2.8 per cent year-on-year, but remained above the central bank's 2.0 per cent target.</p>.Families of 737 crash victims urge rejection of Boeing deal.<p><strong>Norway's PM welcomes move</strong></p><p>The rate decision comes ahead of a parliamentary election in September, with latest polls suggesting that the minority Labour government may be re-elected.</p><p>In a rare public statement after a central bank rate decision, Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere welcomed the move.</p><p>"This is especially good news for everyone with loans," Stoere told news agency NTB.</p><p>The Norwegian policy stance has so far contrasted with other Western central banks, most of which started cutting rates last year as growth slowed and inflation waned.</p><p>"The central bank remains vigilant: if wage and price growth remain higher than projected, there will be fewer interest rate cuts," Oeystein Doerum, chief economist at the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprises, said in a statement.</p>.Stock markets decline in early trade on weak global peers amid Middle East tensions.<p>The Swiss central bank on Thursday cut its policy rate to zero, citing negative inflation and a cloudy global outlook.</p><p>Sweden similarly cut its policy rate on Wednesday, by a quarter point to 2.0 per cent, citing economic weakening, while the US Federal Reserve kept rates steady. Both central banks said they may further reduce borrowing costs later this year.</p><p>Britain's central bank is expected to keep interest rates on hold later on Thursday.</p>