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RBNZ's 'clear' message gets traction in pushing down kiwi

Thursday 21 July 2016 11:09 AM

RBNZ's 'clear' message gets traction in pushing down kiwi

By Paul McBeth

July 21 (BusinessDesk) - The Reserve Bank's "clear" message that interest rates are set to plumb a new record-low achieved got the desired effect in pushing the kiwi dollar to a month-low.

The central bank today said "further easing was likely" with the strong currency 6 percent above the RBNZ's expectations on a trade-weighted basis and making it difficult to meet the mandated target of keeping inflation between 1 percent and 3 percent over the medium term. Consumer prices rose an annual 0.4 percent in the June quarter, its seventh quarter below the band with the strong kiwi's deflationary effect being compounded by last year's slump in oil prices.

The kiwi fell to 69.67 US cents from 70.18 cents immediately before the statement while the trade-weighted index dropped to 74.82 from 75.40. Two-year swaps fell seven basis points to 2.01 percent.

"The governor delivered a pretty clear dovish statement this morning which is really giving things a good nudge," said Mark Johnson, senior dealer foreign exchange at OMF in Wellington. "The market was looking for a dovish assessment to essentially confirm an August rate cut - they've got that and the market is now pricing in in a 96 percent chance of a cut in August, it doesn't get much better than that."

OMF's Johnson said the kiwi has broken through two important levels - 70.50 US cents and 69.90 cents - which opens the door to an even steeper decline.

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The Reserve Bank has been reluctant to cut the official cash rate too far for fear of further inflaming a housing market that's threatening financial stability in a world where rates are near zero, making New Zealand assets offer better returns and stoking demand for the currency. The announcement of new loan-to-value ratio restrictions for banks and the unscheduled economic update raised expectations the RBNZ would try to talk down the currency and signal more rate cuts.

ANZ Bank New Zealand senior economic Philip Borkin said today's RBNZ statement was directed at the strength of the currency, and that it "very likely" indicated two more rate cuts.

"Together with the latest LVR limit proposal, the RBNZ appears to have gone into full attack mode in an attempt to tackle some of the considerable tensions it is facing," Borkin said. "For the market to push a more aggressive easing cycle beyond that we need to see concrete action from the RBNZ, as well as evidence that the domestic data flow is turning and macro-prudential tools are biting."

Major central banks running near-zero interest rate monetary policies has been one of the prime sources of the kiwi's strength. Recent US data has prompted traders to increase the chance the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates before the year's out, while expectations have dimmed that the Bank of England will have to cut rates in the wake of the UK's vote to quit the European Union.

OMF's Johnson said that means if governor Graeme Wheeler delivers a rate cut next month, it should buy New Zealand some time before other central bank actions reduce the allure of the kiwi.

(BusinessDesk)

ends

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