New Zealand inflation report could pave way for RBNZ rate cuts

    • The RBNZ expects so-called non-tradable inflation to slow from an annual rate of 5.8 per cent in the first quarter to 5.3 per cent in the second.
    • The RBNZ expects so-called non-tradable inflation to slow from an annual rate of 5.8 per cent in the first quarter to 5.3 per cent in the second. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Tue, Jul 16, 2024 · 06:12 AM

    NEW Zealand inflation may have slowed more than the central bank expects in the second quarter, paving the way for it to contemplate interest-rate cuts.

    The annual inflation rate fell to 3.4 per cent from 4 per cent in the first quarter, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. That would be below the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) forecast of 3.6 per cent and the slowest in three years. Statistics New Zealand releases the consumers price index report at 10.45 am on Wednesday (Jul 17) in Wellington.

    The RBNZ held the Official Cash Rate (OCR) at 5.5 per cent last week but surprised markets by acknowledging signs of a deepening economic downturn, saying tight monetary policy may be curbing demand “more strongly than expected”. The central bank sounded much more confident that inflation will return to its 1 to 3 per cent target band this year, fuelling bets that rate cuts could start within months.

    “We are increasingly comfortable that sub-3 per cent inflation will be achieved in the second half of 2024 and that conditions are in place that will sustain 1 to 3 per cent inflation,” said Mark Smith, senior economist at ASB Bank in Auckland. “A 25 basis-point OCR cut in November is our base case scenario,” but there’s a risk “of RBNZ cuts coming sooner and larger over 2024 than previously thought”, he said.

    Investors see a better than 50 per cent chance of a 25-point reduction at the RBNZ’s next policy decision on Aug 14 and are pricing at least two by November, swaps data show.

    Economic slump

    There is mounting evidence that the economy contracted in the three months to June, which would mean gross domestic product has fallen in five of the past seven quarters. The manufacturing sector has been in recession for 16 months, the services sector is contracting at the fastest pace since the pandemic, and retail card spending fell for a fifth straight month in June.

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    A key to unlocking rate cuts will be whether there is a significant easing in domestic price pressures, which have remained elevated due to things such as rising rents, insurance costs and local government levies.

    The RBNZ expects so-called non-tradable inflation to slow from an annual rate of 5.8 per cent in the first quarter to 5.3 per cent in the second.

    A print below that “will likely strengthen the view that we are nearing interest-rate cuts”, said Mary Jo Vergara, an economist at Kiwibank in Auckland.

    Mike Jones, chief economist at Bank of New Zealand in Wellington, said all three remaining RBNZ meetings in 2024 should be regarded as “live”.

    “November is our central forecast,” he said. “But, against a backdrop of collapsing activity indicators, there is a heightened probability that a cut either comes earlier or, if the Bank does wait it out until November, it kicks things off with a larger, 50 basis-point cut.” BLOOMBERG

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