The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) defied market expectations it
would adopt a more hawkish tone at its policy meeting on Thursday, retaining
instead its neutral
stance and sending the country's currency to an 11-month
low.
The monetary policy statement accompanying the RBNZ's decision to keep
its benchmark interest rate steady at 1.75 percent was the clearest sign yet of
the divergence between the central bank and the market on the inflation
outlook.
"Underlying inflationary pressure is no different today than it was
in February," Assistant Governor John McDermott told Reuters in an
interview, adding that a spike in headline inflation in the March quarter was
mainly due to temporary rises in petrol and food prices.
Inflation accelerated to 2.2 percent in the quarter, well above the
RBNZ's projection of 1.5 percent, and the first time since 2011 inflation had
reached the midpoint of the central bank's target range.
"There is a lot of noise and some people are misunderstanding what
they are seeing," McDermott said. "I think some people have simply
got it wrong."
The bank's consumer price index forecasts show inflation falling back to
the bottom of the 1-3 percent target band next year.
It maintained an unchanged official cash rate (OCR) projection that
implies the next move will be a tightening in late 2019, surprising economists
who had expected that timeline to shift forward to the first half of 2019.
McDermott said the bank retains "a broad view that the next (rate)
move could be up or down."
"Premature tightening of policy could undermine growth, causing
inflation to persistently undershoot the target midpoint," the bank said
in its Monetary Policy Statement.
Conversely, "further policy easing, in an attempt to see
non-tradables inflation strengthen more quickly, would risk generating
unnecessary volatility in the economy."
Satish Ranchhod, a senior economist at Westpac in Auckland, said he
agreed that some of the recent inflation was temporary but added that a strong
outlook for construction would drive up prices.
"We do think inflation's going to rise a bit more quickly than the
Reserve Bank is going to factor in," he said.
KIWI FALL
RBNZ Governor Graeme Wheeler said that a 5 percent decline in the New
Zealand dollar on a trade-weighted basis over the past three months was
"encouraging, and if sustained, would help rebalance the growth
outlook."
He dropped the phrase "further depreciation is needed to achieve
more balanced growth" that had featured in statements published earlier
this year.
However, McDermott told Reuters that while the bank was "not
unhappy" with an immediate 1.4 percent drop in the New Zealand dollar
NZD=D4 to an 11-month low of $0.6843 after the statement, policymakers
"continue to think that a little bit more is necessary."
McDermott said the main three international risks were the outlook for
U.S. fiscal policy, European growth and China demand.
"The risk of the extreme outcomes from those three things seems to
be less than they were a few months ago," he said, while still advising
caution.
Citibank economists said the RBNZ had delivered a somewhat mixed message,
although the market had interpreted it as dovish, there were elements that
hinted at inflationary stresses.
"Despite...key signposts on the policy bias, the monetary policy
statement is littered by comments that point to rising capacity pressure,"
they said in an emailed note.
Nick Tuffley, chief economist at ASB Bank in Auckland, queried whether
the RBNZ's rate outlook was too serene.
"There are a few things in there that raise some question marks
about whether or not the Reserve Bank's being too sanguine in expecting to keep
interest rates at a record low for another two and a half years," Tuffley
told Reuters.
Reuters
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