Kiwi’s Yet To See Higher Rates Thanks To Migration?

The Reserve Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee held the Official Cash Rate at 5.5% Wednesday in Wellington. This was as expected by most economists. But the central bank has been spooked by stronger near-term growth that’s being driven by the return of international students and immigrants after the pandemic.

As a result, there was a significant surprise, raising its forecasts for the OCR — implying a greater chance of an increase — and predicting no reduction until mid-2025.

This was the final policy meeting of the year and said it will hike them in 2024 if inflation doesn’t decelerate fast enough.

“We are confident we are restrictive with our monetary policy stance now and that provides us the ability to wait, to watch the data, but certainly highlight our willingness to move if we have to,” Governor Adrian Orr told reporters. “We are showing an upward bias to the interest rate, but it’s not a probability.”

Markets are out of kilter with the RBNZ, as Investors have in recent weeks ramped up bets that central banks globally, including the RBNZ, will pivot to rate cuts in the first half of 2024 as price pressures wane. But Orr said the RBNZ is concerned that inflation has been outside its 1-3% target band for so long, and that record immigration and a housing market recovery are adding to upside risks.

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Digital Finance Analytics (DFA) Blog
Digital Finance Analytics (DFA) Blog
Kiwi’s Yet To See Higher Rates Thanks To Migration?
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Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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