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Bollard lifts OCR, predicts more moderate pace of increases

Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard raised the Official Cash Rate (OCR) a quarter point to 3% as expected, while predicting a less aggressive path for further increases, given subdued domestic demand and a fragile global economy.

Thursday, July 29th 2010, 9:04AM

"While the outlook for economic growth has softened somewhat, it is still appropriate to continue to reduce the extraordinary level of support implemented during the 2008/09 recession," Bollard said in Wellington today.

"The pace and extent of further OCR increases is likely to be more moderate than was projected in the June statement."

Recent data and confidence measures point to an economy that has slowed to a more tepid pace of growth, easing pressure on the central bank to embark on an aggressive tightening. Business confidence weakened for a third straight month, according to the National Bank Business Outlook, with firms seeing smaller profits and reducing plans to hire more workers.

Demand in the housing market has remained weak, net migration is waning and consumers are less inclined to spend as they reduce leverage.

"The momentum evident in activity and inflation is presently insufficient to justify a hike in the OCR at every meeting this year," Darren Gibbs, chief economist at Deutsche Bank, said before the RBNZ statement was released.

Today's rate hike was predicted by all 20 economists in a Reuters survey and they expect Bollard will continue to lift the OCR back to more normal levels, ending the extraordinary stimulus in place since April last year when he cut the OCR to a record low 2.5%.

The RBNZ resumed raising interest rates on June 10. Since then data has shown the economy expanded 0.6% in the first quarter, less than the bank's 0.8% forecast.

The dilemma for Bollard is to predict how inflationary pressures will have emerged over the next 18 months, with a risk that the short-term effects of increased government levies and imposts, such as the costs of the Emissions Trading Scheme, GST hike and ACC charges will feed through into broader inflation expectations.

Inflation is expected to spike to over 5% in the first quarter of 2011 though Bollard has said he sees little ongoing impact, with the GST increase softened by tax cuts. Still, business surveys shows firms are preparing to raise prices and the extent of second-round impacts isn't clear yet.

 

Comments from our readers

On 29 July 2010 at 10:48 am Barry said:
Who do we think we are hiking rtaes when much of the world we like to compare ourselves to has stable rates at much lower levels. Even the Auusies are holding and thinking they may have gone too far. Economists and their linear models simply don't get it - there has been a major and long term change in economic behaviour for western countries and resolution of these changes will take many years.
On 29 July 2010 at 5:11 pm mortgage mantra said:
I am sorry but this increase is beyond my personal understanding of what is happening in the NZ economy.What has the Reserve Bank seen that the common man is unaware of? Is the Reserve bank seeing a surge in employment & immigration?Is the Reserve Bank seeing a boom in the property sector in NZ? That would be ludicrous because the property market is dead as a dodo.Give us some reasoning that we understand as the common man Mr.Bollard. Please do.
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Future interest rate hikes softened

The Reserve Bank has kept the OCR at 2.50% as expected, but had lowered its forecast track for the 90 day bill rate by around 60 basis points (0.6%) to a peak of 4.30% by the end of next year.

For borrowers that means floating home loans are not forecast to rise as much as previously forecast. In June the expectation was that the rates would rise 2% in the next 12 months: that figure has now been wound back to 1.4%.

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