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Just caught up on some interesting singapore news about what's driving MAS policy decisions lately, and it's pretty clear energy costs are the main story here. Jester Koh from UOB broke down how imported energy prices have basically forced the central bank to revise their inflation outlook upward - we're now looking at 1.5-2.5% for both core and headline inflation in 2026, up from the previous 1.0-2.0% range.
What's happening is straightforward but significant. Oil and gas prices are climbing, which flows through to electricity bills, transport costs, and goods prices across the board. The thing is, even if Middle Eastern supplies stabilize, energy prices aren't expected to drop anytime soon. Delayed shipments, slow supply recovery, and countries building up reserves are all keeping pressure on global energy markets.
UOB has been adjusting their own forecasts too. They've pushed their 2026 headline inflation estimate to 2.0% (from 1.5%) and core inflation to 1.9% (from 1.5%). But here's what caught my attention - both UOB and MAS are flagging that inflation could actually run hotter than these forecasts. Higher utility and transport costs hitting both goods and services means the upside risks are real.
From a policy angle, this singapore news about energy pressures is pointing toward tighter monetary policy. UOB is expecting MAS could increase the slope of the S$NEER policy band by 50 basis points to 1.5% per annum at their October meeting. There's even talk it could happen earlier in July if inflation accelerates further.
The broader takeaway for singapore news watchers? Energy costs aren't just a temporary headwind - they're reshaping how central banks think about inflation and monetary policy for the rest of 2026. Worth monitoring if you're paying attention to regional economic dynamics.