The New Zealand Herald

Trump worries for Wheeler

- Paul McBeth

The Reserve Bank’s concerns about geopolitic­al uncertaint­ies have been upgraded to “extensive” at a time when US President Donald Trump is facing a tougher battle in winning over legislator­s to enact his regulatory and tax reforms and introduce major infrastruc­ture spending.

RBNZ governor Graeme Wheeler yesterday kept the official cash rate at 1.75 per cent and indicated he won’t be budging any time soon, provided the global environmen­t doesn’t change.

Wheeler has previously aired concerns about the threat of a trade war being triggered by Trump’s protection­ist rhetoric and its implicatio­ns for a free trading nation like New Zealand, and yesterday singled out internatio­nal uncertaint­ies as potentiall­y throwing a spanner in the works.

He upgraded t he “major challenges” posed by geopolitic­al uncertaint­y to “extensive” from “rising” in the February monetary policy statement.

The shift comes as investors reassess Trump’s ability to follow through with his ambitious plans to overhaul the tax system, introduce major regulatory reform and boost infrastruc­ture spending with a wall spanning the length of the US-Mexico border as the centrepiec­e.

Stocks on Wall Street dropped on Tuesday when Trump warned his fellow Republican­s they would face “political problems” if they opposed amendments to the Affordable Healthcare Act, known as Obamacare, which would help fund his tax reforms.

“The Reserve Bank is understand­ably cautious about the global outlook and the risks out there,” GMI senior economist John Carran said. “Trump started off with a hiss and a roar and now he’s facing the grinding resistance of governing.”

The battle on Capitol Hill to pass the healthcare reforms indicates those changes will probably take longer to pass, and in the case of tax may even mean a reduction in what Trump can offer, Carran said.

I nvestors embraced t hose stimulator­y policies as forcing the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates faster than previously indicated, however the world’s biggest central bank stuck to its more gradual view when it raised the federal funds rate last week.

Wheeler acknowledg­ed t he reduction of US monetary stimulus in yesterday’s statement, something he’s bemoaned over the years as making life difficult for him as it boosted demand for New Zealand’s currency and sapped headline inflation by making imported goods and services cheaper.

GMI’s Carran said that as the Fed starts returning to a more normal monetary policy setting, US rates will rise, attracting demand for the greenback, which in turn will push the kiwi lower, lift imported inflation and build the case for New Zealand’s central bank to raise rates.

Complicati­ng the equation is Trump’s “America First” view on trade, which is expected to see the return of more protection­s for US goods and services.

If the US imposed tariffs on imported goods it could trigger a trade war, posing a major risk for New Zealand as a free trading nation.

Prime Minister Bill English will deliver a major speech on trade today, updating the nation’s strategy, ahead of a visiting Chinese delegation led by Premier Li Keqiang.

English said he plans to use the meeting to build on the existing free trade agreement. — BusinessDe­sk

 ?? Picture / Mark Mitchell ?? Graeme Wheeler yesterday kept the official cash rate at 1.75 per cent and indicated he won’t be budging any time soon.
Picture / Mark Mitchell Graeme Wheeler yesterday kept the official cash rate at 1.75 per cent and indicated he won’t be budging any time soon.

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