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New Zealand Inflation Remains Below Central Bank Target Midpoint

Published 16/07/2019, 09:21 am
© Bloomberg. A woman rides a bicycle past yachts docked at a marina in Auckland, New Zealand, on Friday, Dec. 9, 2016. New Zealand last week unveiled a half-year budget update that forecast rising surpluses and a stronger economy than previously expected, giving prime minister Bill English the option of taking a tax-cuts package into next year's election campaign. Photographer: Brendon O'Hagan/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- New Zealand consumer prices rose at a faster pace in the second quarter, led by a surge in fuel prices, while there were few signs of broadening inflation pressures elsewhere in the economy that would take the gauge toward the central bank’s target midpoint.

  • Consumer prices gained 1.7% from a year earlier, Statistics New Zealand said Tuesday in Wellington. That was faster than the 1.5% pace in the first quarter and matched the median forecast of economists. Prices rose 0.6% from three months earlier, also matching expectations

Key Insights

  • The Reserve Bank in May forecast annual inflation would rise to 1.7% in the second quarter, but would then slow and remain below the midpoint of its 1-3% target until mid-2021
  • Last month, the RBNZ held the official cash rate at a record-low 1.5% and said that given the downside risks for employment and inflation, a lower OCR may be needed
  • With business confidence weakening and leading indicators of manufacturing and spending also soft, there is increasing concern the economy lacks the momentum needed to get inflation back to 2%
  • Consumer prices excluding food, fuel and energy rose 1.7% from a year earlier, picking up from 1.5% in the first quarter, while other measures of underlying inflation also accelerated slightly. The RBNZ publishes its own core inflation measures later Tuesday
  • While the data showed a 5.8% lift in fuel prices in the quarter, the RBNZ can look through temporary volatility when it sets monetary policy
  • Non-tradable prices, which aren’t influenced by the currency, rose 2.8% from a year earlier -- matching the pace in the first quarter -- led by rents and the cost of building new houses

Market Reaction

  • The New Zealand dollar was little changed at 67.22 U.S. cents at 10:57 a.m. in Wellington. The chance of a rate cut at the next review in August remained at 84%, according to swaps data.

Get More

  • RBNZ Says Lower Rate May Be Needed After Holding at Record Low

© Bloomberg. A woman rides a bicycle past yachts docked at a marina in Auckland, New Zealand, on Friday, Dec. 9, 2016. New Zealand last week unveiled a half-year budget update that forecast rising surpluses and a stronger economy than previously expected, giving prime minister Bill English the option of taking a tax-cuts package into next year's election campaign. Photographer: Brendon O'Hagan/Bloomberg

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