Otago Daily Times

Cash rate tipped to stall for a year

- DENE MACKENZIE

THE Reserve Bank is expected to reiterate its main ‘‘onhold’’ message when it releases its Monetary Policy Statement on Thursday.

Noone is expecting the central bank to lift its official cash rate (OCR) from 1.75% until next year — at the earliest in August and possibly as late as November.

Westpac senior economist Dominick Stephens said the economy had been sending out contradict­ory signals on monetary policy, as it often did.

Growth was slowing but inflation was increasing. Those positives and negatives would roughly offset one another in the Reserve Bank’s deliberati­ons, meaning the bank would stay on the same course it charted in May.

Thursday’s MPS will be the third under governor Adrian Orr.

In May, the Reserve Bank’s main point was employment was around its sustainabl­e level but inflation was below target.

The balance of those factors meant the OCR would have to remain at a stimulator­y level for a considerab­le period of time, Mr Stephens said.

The Reserve Bank’s forecasts showed an unchanged OCR until late next year and gradual increases thereafter.

However, the May MPS emphasised more heavily the OCR could move in either direc tion, if required by changing conditions.

‘‘Markets interprete­d that as surprising­ly dovish and latched on to the Reserve Bank’s comment the next move in the OCR could be ‘up or down’.’’

In the June OCR review, the central bank reiterated the main messages from May and repeated the ‘‘up or down’’ phrase, he said.

Recent weaker GDP data was emphasised and interprete­d the Government’s May Budget as less stimulator­y, suggesting it thought the balance of risks had moved slightly further away from OCR hikes.

There was surprise at the Reserve Bank’s interpreta­tion of fiscal policy, particular­ly given the Treasury had judged the Budget to be stimulator­y for monetary policy, Mr Stephens said.

The Reserve Bank was expected to repeat its onhold message on Thursday.

‘‘We also expect the bank to reuse the words ‘up or down’, given the importance this phrase has attained in the mind of financial markets.

‘‘The commentary on recent events is likely to be twosided as positive and negative develop ments are discussed.’’

There were several areas in the economy the Reserve Bank would have to map out in detail, Mr Stephens said.

For a long while, the Reserve Bank expected the economy would accelerate in the first half of the year while Westpac expected it to slow.

The evidence had clearly ‘‘piled up’’ in favour of decelerati­on and everything from business confidence to consumer spending had slowed.

The Reserve Bank was going to have to trim its growth forecast and that would be a powerful argument against rate hikes, he said.

The Reserve Bank’s goal of 2% sustained inflation looked more attainable than it had for years.

The exchange rate had remained consistent­ly below the Reserve Bank’s May forecast, which would help bolster inflation.

Although the central bank expected the housing market would cool, the slowdown had been more severe than anticipate­d.

The increase in unemployme­nt from 4.4% to 4.5% was nothing in the scheme of things, Mr Stephens said.

The Reserve Bank’s previous judgement remained valid. Employment was close to its maximum sustainabl­e level and the state of the labour market was a reason not to cut the OCR.

 ??  ?? Dominick Stephens
Dominick Stephens

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