9th July 2026 - 3 min read

Bank Negara Malaysia has kept the Overnight Policy Rate unchanged at 2.75% following the Monetary Policy Committee’s meeting on 9 July 2026. The central bank said the current rate remains appropriate to support economic growth while maintaining price stability.
The OPR serves as a key benchmark that influences the base lending and financing rates banks use to price loans. With the rate held steady, borrowers on variable-rate loans are unlikely to see any change to their monthly repayments for now, and deposit rates should also stay largely the same unless individual banks adjust their own pricing.
Malaysia’s economy grew at a steady pace in the second quarter, driven by sustained domestic demand and export performance that came in stronger than expected. Employment and wage growth are expected to keep supporting household spending, while investment activity will come from multi-year infrastructure projects, newly rolled out public initiatives and continued progress on national master plans.
The external sector should benefit further from improved global prospects and demand for electrical and electronics exports, along with a rebound in non-E&E exports and continued tourist spending.
On this basis, BNM expects 2026 growth to stay firmly within its forecast range of 4% to 5%. This marks a full year at 2.75% since BNM lowered the OPR from 3.00% on 9 July 2025, its first rate cut in five years.
Headline inflation averaged 1.7% and core inflation 2.1% over the first five months of 2026, broadly in line with BNM’s expectations, even as some of the recent rise in global costs began to filter through to domestic prices.
The central bank expects the overall impact on both headline and core inflation this year to stay contained, helped by supportive policy measures and stable demand conditions that limit how much of the external cost pressure reaches consumers.
BNM flagged tighter global financial conditions and stretched valuations in equity markets as risks, alongside uncertainty around the Middle East conflict, which remains fluid and could still affect Malaysia’s growth and inflation.
Elevated commodity prices linked to the situation are expected to add some upward pressure on prices. A sustained de-escalation of the conflict, a faster recovery in global supply chains and stronger technology spending could support growth further, the central bank said.
At the current level, BNM considers its monetary policy stance appropriate for supporting sustainable growth and maintaining price stability. The MPC said it will continue monitoring global and domestic developments before reassessing the balance of risks to growth and inflation.
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Iman writes about personal finance with curiosity. She is interested in the stories behind money, the hesitation around big decisions, and the small habits that shape financial futures. Off the clock, she is either dissecting a film or climbing her way up the leaderboard in her favourite games.
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