The Pak Banker

Reserve Bank surprise: OCR on hold

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr explains decision to leave Official Cash Rate at 1 per cent.

Mortgage rates and interest rates on savings could rise after the Reserve Bank defied bank forecasts and elected to keep the Official Cash Rate (OCR) on hold at 1 per cent.

All the major banks had forecast a 25 basis-point cut, with Westpac reverting to that forecast on Tuesday after the Reserve Bank reported a slight dip in business managers' expectatio­ns of future inflation.

That meant a 25bp cut was largely priced into the lending and currency markets prior to Wednesday's monetary policy statement.

But the Reserve Bank's decision to instead keep the OCR on hold means banks will be scrambling to reassess the outlook for next year. ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner had been forecastin­g two further rate cuts in February and May, taking the rate down 0.25 per cent. But the Reserve Bank's decision may put that broader trajectory of lower interest rates into doubt.

The New Zealand dollar rose by the best part of a US cent and an Australian cent after the Reserve Bank announced the OCR was on hold at 1 per cent. ASB chief economist Nick Tuffley still expected the OCR to fall to 0.5 per cent next year. But he said the interest-rate market reaction to the Reserve Bank's decision was "sizeable", with the two-year swap rate up 21 basis points in the immediate aftermath.

"Financial markets have unwound much of the pricing of OCR cuts," he said.

BNZ research head Stephen Toplis said it was now assuming the OCR was on hold for the foreseeabl­e future, saying it had "effectivel­y raised the hurdle" for any future rate cuts.

The New Zealand dollar jumped by just over 0.8 US cents to 64.19 US cents within minutes of the decision being released, with similar strong gains against other major currencies. The Reserve Bank said that while inflation remained below the 2 per cent target mid-point, economic developmen­ts since August did not warrant a change to "the already stimulator­y monetary setting at this time".

It remained "prepared to act as required", it said. Governor Adrian Orr said it was "certainly not the bank's conscious intention" to try to surprise people. "Market expectatio­ns have been moving around considerab­ly", from a cut being a 50:50 possibilit­y to a 90 per cent likelihood, he said. Deputy governor Christian Hawkesby said it was inevitable some part of the market was going to be surprised.

Orr said it would be up to the retail banks to decide whether the decision warranted a rise in mortgage rates. "They have to make commercial business decisions about what they want to do with their customers. "What we have made very clear is we believe monetary policy is very stimulator­y and that we will have to keep it at that position for a prolonged period of time - and that if circumstan­ces change we will act." The bank's chief economist Yuong Ha emphasised it expected interest rates to remain low for a long time.

Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr had surprised the market in August when he announced a 50bp cut to the OCR - double the cut banks had been expecting.

While its monetary policy committee reached a consensus to keep the OCR at 1 per cent, the Reserve Bank said it noted "the risks to the economy in the near term were tilted to the downside". "Economic growth continued to slow in mid-2019 reflecting weak business investment and soft household spending," the bank said. "We expect economic growth to remain subdued over the remainder of the calendar year." But New Zealand's export commodity prices had been robust and the lower New Zealand dollar exchange rate this year was also providing "a useful additional offset to the weaker global economic environmen­t", it said.

"Domestic economic activity is expected to increase during 2020 supported by low interest rates, higher wage growth, and increased government spending and investment.

"The low level of the OCR has flowed through to lower lending rates more generally, which support spending and investment."

ASB's Tuffley said that as well as "surprising the market" by keeping the OCR on hold, it was notable that its "OCR forecast" remained unchanged from August.

"The accompanyi­ng statements suggest the door is still very slightly ajar for a further OCR cut next year, ' if needed'.

"To us, the RBNZ's new growth outlook still appears too rosy ... moreover, the RBNZ has yet to factor in the economic impact of its impending bank capital increases, for which we expect a bigger economic impact than the RBNZ," he said.

 ??  ?? But the Reserve Bank's decision to instead keep the OCR on hold means banks will be scrambling to reassess the outlook for next year.
ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner had been forecastin­g two further rate cuts in February and May, taking the rate down 0.25
per cent.
But the Reserve Bank's decision to instead keep the OCR on hold means banks will be scrambling to reassess the outlook for next year. ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner had been forecastin­g two further rate cuts in February and May, taking the rate down 0.25 per cent.

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