Reserve Bank of New Zealand
The Bank sees the cash rate ahead at:
- 5.61% in September 2024 (prior 5.6%)
- 5.54% in June 2025 (prior 5.33%)
- 5.4% in September 2025 (prior 5.15%)
- 2.99% in June 2027
That 5.4% in September 2025 is a full 25bp higher than its previous forecast.
Forecasts inflation at 2.6% y/y by June 2025.
Statement:
- Monetary policy needs to be restricted
- Restrictive monetary
policy has reduced capacity pressures in the New Zealand economy and
lowered consumer price inflation - Annual consumer
price inflation is expected to return to within the committee’s 1 to
3 percent target range by the end of 2024. - Welcome decline in
inflation in part reflects lower inflation for goods and services
imported into New Zealand - Components of
domestic services inflation persists - Wage growth and
domestic spending are easing - Weaker capacity
pressures and an easing labour market are reducing domestic inflation
Minutes:
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Members agreed they remain confident that monetary policy is
restricting demand - A further decline in
capacity pressure is expected, supporting a continued decline in
inflation - Committee agreed
that interest rates need to remain at a restrictive level for a
sustained period to ensure annual headline cpi inflation returns to
the 1 to 3 percent target range - Committee noted that
annual headline cpi inflation was expected to return to the target
band in the december quarter of this year - Domestic inflation
has fallen more slowly than expected and headline consumers price
index (cpi) inflation remains above the committee’s target band - Committee also
agreed that interest rates may have to remain at a restrictive level
for longer than anticipated in the february monetary policy statement
to ensure the inflation target is met - The committee
discussed the possibility of increasing the ocr at this meeting
A more hawkish RBNZ, not only suggesting later rate cuts but even a possibility of another hike.
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RBNZ Governor Orr will hold his press conference in an hour.
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Background to this:
And, what’s still to come this week from the Bank:
Old photo, some of these officials have moved on