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The RBNZ Observer: A rate hike expected

Published: Fri 24 Jan 2014 04:48 PM
The RBNZ Observer: A rate hike expected
New Zealand’s economy is beginning to boom, boosted by the post-earthquake rebuild in Canterbury and strong housing and dairy prices
- Growth and inflation are running ahead of the RBNZ’s previous expectations, which we think will trump concerns over the high level of the NZD
- While finely balanced, we expect the RBNZ is likely to raise the cash rate by 25bps at next week’s meeting, in order to keep ahead of the game on inflation
A close call, but RBNZ expected to raise rates
New Zealand’s economy is beginning to boom. Post-earthquake reconstruction, solid house price growth, a rapid run up in export prices and very accommodative policy are providing a significant boost to growth. After registering quarterly GDP growth of +1.4% q-o-q in Q3 (an annualised rate of +5.7%), recent business surveys have suggested that the economy is likely to have expanded at a similar pace in Q4.
With these drivers in place, the RBNZ had already signalled, in its last official statement (12 December) that rate hikes would be needed by April this year. Since that statement, both inflation and growth have surprised the RBNZ on the upside and forward indicators also suggest that there is more momentum than the central bank was forecasting.
The challenge for the central bank is that the NZD still remains high and has also risen since then. But, in our view, the stronger economy and higher inflation are likely to trump concerns over the elevated exchange rate. The economy is already operating at capacity, demand is booming and inflation is ahead of expectations. Interest rates need to rise soon if the central bank is to meet its inflation goals.
We see the RBNZ as likely to hike by 25bp next week.
The decision is, however, still a close call, with the main risk being that they wait until March to move. This would allow the rate hike to be accompanied by their official statement and give them the opportunity to present a full set of projections, rather than the one-page summary that will accompany next week’s announcement. But, on balance, we think this is unlikely to hold them back, given that the RBNZ’s medium-term outlook is still intact and the Governor is already scheduled to give a public address the day after the decision. We expect them to ring in the New Year with a rate hike.
ends

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