29 NovemberThe RBNZ left the cash rate unchanged at 5.5% today. No surprises there. But their hawkish tone certainly surprised. The
RBNZ revealed an upwards bias to inflation risks and will not call job done until they see the fruits of their labour
shown with inflation back down to 2%.Despite a number of data points which would have suggested the end of the tightening cycle, the RBNZ have kept the door
wide open for another hike. Lifting the OCR track to 5.69% by September 2024, signalling a 75% chance of a hike.The timing of cuts is getting pushed further and further into the distance. We fear the downside risk of a softening
global backdrop and the high interest rates which are still making their way through the economy. But we have to take
the RBNZ’s word. Rate cuts are not looking likely anytime soon.
“…capacity pressures are assumed to decline by less than in the August Statement over the projection, supported by strong
net immigration, a higher outlook for house prices, and stronger government investment over the medium term. World
interest rates have also increased, placing downward pressure on the New Zealand dollar exchange rate and, all else
equal, boosting inflationary pressure within the economy.” (RBNZ Nov MPS)
The RBNZ left the cash rate unchanged at 5.50% - no surprises. But the OCR track was lifted from 5.59% to 5.69% - big
surprise. The RBNZ came out a lot more hawkish than expected. Inflation came in below their August expectations. But the
RBNZ made clear that the champagne’s still sitting on ice. Rapidly decelerating imported inflation is doing most of the
work in bringing down headline inflation. Domestic inflation is a slow-moving beast. And risks are tilted to the upside.
Upside risks for which the RBNZ holds very little tolerance. Inflation has been sitting above target since mid-2021, and
is forecast to remain above 3% for another 12 months. It’s going take some time before we get back to the 2% target. And
the RBNZ is running out of patience. The RBNZ made clear that they’re “willing” to hike rates again if needed. Inflation
expectations have become unanchored, and their credibility is under threat.
“Some members noted that inflation has now been above target for some time, and that there should be a low tolerance for
any increase in the time to return inflation to target.” (RBNZ Nov MPS)
Everything washes out in the OCR track. And it was more hawkish than we had hoped. The key message in the track is that
the RBNZ is willing to raise the cash rate again. The RBNZ lifted the OCR track to 5.69% by the September 2024 quarter.
So odds are on (75%) for another rate hike and way out in 2024. We were surprised by the move. The RBNZ is clearly
putting more emphasis on the growing demand impulse of the current migration boom. There’s greater risk that the boost
to aggregate demand and housing (specifically rents) will outweigh the deflationary force of greater supply capacity.
There’s no doubt that a higher track was presented to also remind markets that “higher for longer” remains the rhetoric.
Influenced largely by offshore developments, wholesale rates have recently drifted lower – effectively loosening
financial conditions. And that’s not something the RBNZ wants here and now. What they do want is for rates to remain
restrictive to continue weighing on household consumption and broader economic activity. Wholesale rates and therefore
mortgage and other lending rates, need to stay high and dry. And the threat of further rate hikes does just that.
The other, somewhat academic, rational for the move higher in the OCR track was the upward revision to the guesstimated
“neutral rate” – the Goldilocks interest rate that’s not hot or cold, it’s just right. The non-contractionary rate was
lifted in the August MPS, from 2% to 2.25%, resulting in a higher track. And we saw the same play out today. The neutral
rate was revised up 25bps to 2.50%. That’s the RBNZ’s way of saying the current level of interest rates don’t hurt as
much as they’d like. The current cash rate is a little less effective in constraining demand. So basically, monetary
policy is not quite as tight. And, in their eyes, we can handle a little higher rates.
But the hawkishness didn’t stop with the lift in the OCR track peak. Thoughts of rate cuts were also squashed. The new
track has now pushed out the first rate cut to 2025, which would mean RBNZ staying on hold for ~2 years! We disagree. We
acknowledge that the risk over the next 6-9 months is tilted toward further tightening. The RBNZ admitted an upward bias
to rates. But we still believe the RBNZ will be in a position to normalise policy next year. Rate cuts could well be a
2024 story. Just later in 2024. We expect the inflation rate to be back within the 1-3% target band by mid-2024, and
confidently returning to the 2% target. In saying that, our initial call for May is proving optimistic, at this stage.
The RBNZ will want more data under its belt, specifically inflation prints, before changing direction. We now pencil in
the first rate cut in November next year.