NZ Dollar Outlook: All eyes on Thursday's MPS
NZ Dollar Outlook: Investors wait for Reserve Bank’s Thursday pronouncement
by Peter Kerr
March 8 (BusinessWire) – The New Zealand dollar will probably continue to trade between 68.5 U.S. cents and 70 cents as the market waits on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s Thursday assessment on the state of the Kiwi economy and whether it feels cash rates will need to rise in June.
Five of the seven economists and strategists in a BusinessWire survey predict resistance at the 70 U.S. cents level, with 68.5 cents remaining the bottom of the range. The other two feel the dollar may break through the talismanic 70 cents figure, but 71 cents is as far as it may go.
Domestic data will have a stronger influence on
the currency this week, following last week’s positive
news around stronger than expected U.S. employment figures
and Greece’s announcement it will address its internal
monetary problems and hopefully not require an international
bailout of its economy.
Any globally positive news
tends to favour a strengthening of the $NZ as investors
become slightly more accepting of risk and are more prepared
to buy what are considered commodity currencies such as New
Zealand’s or Australia’s.
Last week’s
international good news nudged currencies higher on both
sides of the Tasman, though Australia’s perceived stronger
economy had a cross rate $NZ dollar fall. Data and reaction
on the domestic front will be more important than
international sentiment this week according to all the
pundits.
The New Zealand dollar “will be quiet
this week until we hear what the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
has to say,” said Derek Rankin, director of Rankin
Treasury Advisers. “The market’s expecting a repeat of
what it has been saying in its commentary earlier this year.
The risk is they might say something that is
unexpected.”
Other New Zealand data to be reported
this week includes retail spending, building consents,
manufacturing output and real estate figures. However, it is
the CPI and GDP figures, along with any Reserve Bank
announcements that has most domestic-oriented influence on
the $NZ.
The Reserve Bank is issuing a full monetary policy statement, and as the market reads between its lines there is a small possibility that any bullish tone from the central bank will push the dollar over 70 cents.
“It’s very subtle language the market looks for,” said Westpac senior strategist Imre Speizer. “We’re looking for re-affirmation that it will still be firming the cash rate , as indicated, from mid-year.”
ANZ National senior markets economist Khoon Goh said though there’s a degree of nervousness over what the Reserve Bank of New Zealand might say, and whether the economic tightening cycle could be delayed, the $NZ will struggle to break 70 cents. One factor that could have a downward effect on the kiwi is Australia’s employment figures, also due out later this week. Good news could lift the Australian dollar, and lower New Zealand’s on the cross rate.
Eventually though, given the continuing strength of the Australian dollar, and the historic links it has with the Kiwi dollar, the $NZ dollar will rise on the back of a rise across the Tasman.
(BusinessWire) 12:26:23