That may be the case in Asia, where policy and politics are spicing up local markets. Indonesia's rupiah sank to its lowest in more than six months and the country's stocks leaped on Wednesday after the central bank delivered a surprise rate cut. Not one of the 30 analysts polled by Reuters expected the move.
The Bank of Korea delivers its latest decision on Thursday, and it could not be at a more volatile time for the country, after impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol was arrested on Wednesday and questioned for hours by investigators in relation to a criminal insurrection probe.
The BoK is expected to cut its base rate by 25 basis points to 2.75%, according to 27 out of 34 economists polled by Reuters, with the remaining seven forecasting no change.
Given the tense domestic political situation and in light of the cooler-than-expected U.S. inflation data, could the BoK surprise markets with a 50 bps cut to try and boost growth and loosen financial conditions?
Bank Indonesia's shock move shows that even unanimous consensus forecasts are not always the one-way bet they might seem.
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