Chile's economic activity posts largest increase since mid-2022

Reuters

Published Apr 02, 2024 10:17

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Chile's economic activity index posted its largest year-on-year increase in almost two years in February, central bank data showed on Monday, reinforcing its positive momentum after a major beat in the previous month.

Economic activity in the world's largest copper producer was up 4.5% in February from a year earlier, the central bank said, the most since May 2022, when it had risen 5.1%.

All activities surveyed by the monetary authority had a positive performance in the month, with mining and services - especially transportation - among the highlights.

A number of independent analysts had already pointed out last week that economic activity growth of more than 4% in February was on the cards after sectoral statistics confirmed a good start to the year for the Andean country.

The result, however, still came in as a surprise for analysts polled by the central bank, whose median forecast for activity in February stood at a 1.5% expansion, according to a poll released last month.

The data comes after Chile's economic activity rose by a revised 2.3% year-on-year in January, overshooting market estimates.

The Monthly Economic Activity Indicator (Imacec), which represents about 90% of gross domestic product (GDP), was also up 0.8% in February from the previous month.

"In all, the momentum of both ex-mining and mining activity has clearly outpaced our expectations," JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) economist Diego Pereira said, noting that accommodative fiscal policy and less restrictive monetary policy have provided a boost.

"The question is whether mining would be able to consolidate this level, gain further, or drop in a similar manner to what happened in the prior two years."