NZ central bank signals aggressive tightening pace after 50-bps hike
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[August 17, 2022] By
Lucy Craymer
WELLINGTON (Reuters) -New Zealand's central
bank on Wednesday delivered its seventh straight interest rate hike and
signalled a more hawkish tightening path over coming months to rein in
stubbornly high inflation.
The aggressive tone of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's (RBNZ)
statement warning of future hikes being brought forward caught some
traders by surprise, lifting the local dollar and sending swap rates
higher.
The RBNZ raised the official cash rate (OCR) by 50 basis points to 3.0%
as expected, a level not seen since September 2015, and crucially, it
now sees rates at 4.0% by early next year, compared to a previous
projection of 3.7%.
Wednesday fourth straight 50-bps hike, along with earlier smaller
increases that lifted the cash rate from a record low of 0.25% in
October, marked the most aggressive tightening by the central bank since
1999.
"The Committee agreed that domestic inflationary pressures had increased
since May and to further bring forward the timing of OCR increases," the
central bank said in a statement.
The RBNZ also increased the projected peak for the cash rate to 4.1%
where it expects it to remain into 2024.
"The statement was suitably hawkish, and highlighted the need to
maintain pressure on the economy to demand," said Jarrod Kerr, chief
economist at Kiwibank, which changed its OCR peak for this tightening
cycle to 4%, from 3.5% previously.
Markets were quick to price in the more aggressive outlook.
Bank bill futures for March slid 13 ticks to 95.76, while two-year swap
rates rose 6 basis points to a three-week top of 3.97%. The New Zealand
dollar rose 0.6% initialy before paring the gains, and was last fetching
$0.6311.
"It's hawkish compared to expectations, in both raising the OCR track
and the tone," said Imre Speizer, head of NZ Markets Strategy at
Westpac.
"They're more worried about the labour market, that's sticking out. They
put a new sentence in there to say inflation remains too high and the
labour market remains too tight."
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Pedestrians walk near the main entrance
to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand located in central Wellington,
New Zealand, July 3, 2017. REUTERS/David Gray
COST PRESSURES
All 23 economists polled by Reuters had expected the central bank's policy
committee to lift the cash rate by 50 basis points, but there was some division
about where rates would peak and if it might need to cut them next year.
Inflation has been running at three-decade highs hitting 7.3% in the second
quarter even though the RBNZ has been a front-runner among central banks in
withdrawing pandemic-era stimulus.
"Committee members agreed that monetary conditions needed to continue to tighten
until they are confident there is sufficient restraint on spending to bring
inflation back within its 1-3% per annum target range," the central bank said.
The RBNZ said it expects house prices, a major driver of inflation, to fall by
around 20% by mid-2023 from their peak in late 2021.
"We're seeing prices go from being well north of sustainable to being within the
zone of sustainable," RBNZ Governor Adrian Orr told a news conference.
In the first quarter, New Zealand's economy unexpectedly contracted due to a
surge in COVID-19 cases and growth is expected to be restrained over coming
quarters due to tightening financial conditions.
Orr said that while growth is likely to slow he did not expect a recession,
reinforcing that policymakers' priority was on preventing inflation from getting
out of hand.
"The war in Ukraine has put upward pressure on global commodity prices,
especially oil and food, and disrupted global trade," the central bank's
statement said.
"Lockdowns in some Chinese cities to combat the spread of COVID-19 has
contributed to supply-chain bottlenecks and shipping times and costs remain
elevated."
(Reporting by Lucy Craymer in Wellington; Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in
Sydney; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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