
New Zealand’s central bank kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged for a second month and said it may cut borrowing costs further as a rising currency threatens a recovery from the worst recession in three decades.
“The forecast recovery is based on a further easing in financial conditions,” Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard said in a statement in Wellington today after leaving the official cash rate at 2.5 percent. “If this easing does not occur, the recovery could be put at risk. In these circumstances we would reassess policy settings.”
New Zealand’s dollar fell the most in three weeks after Bollard said rates may fall further and won’t rise until late next year。The central bank cut borrowing costs by 5.75 percentage points between July 2008 and April to buoy an economy that began contracting in the first quarter of last year.
“We continue to expect the dollar to be strong over the next year, which does reinforce the prospect of the Reserve Bank having to cut the cash rate further,” said Nick Tuffley, chief economist at ASB Bank Ltd. in Auckland. He expects quarter-point cuts in September and October.
New Zealand’s dollar tumbled to 65.01 U.S. cents at 10 a.m. in Wellington from 65.74 cents immediately before the statement. The two-year swap rate, a fixed payment made to receive floating rates, fell to 3.94 percent from 4.07 yesterday.
More to Come
“We expect to see a patchy recovery get under way toward the end of the year, but it will be some time before growth returns to healthy levels,” Bollard said. The cash rate “could still move modestly lower over the coming quarters.”
Bollard said inflation is expected to remain comfortably within the 1 percent-to-3 percent range he targets.
Wholesale interest rates and the currency are higher than the central bank assumed, which “is not helping the sustainability of future growth and brings with it additional risks,” he said.
Finance Minister Bill English said this month the currency was “higher than fundamentals warrant” and may hamper his desire for the nation’s recovery to be based around exports and investment rather than consumption led by borrowing.
Exports fell 5.4 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, the government reported this week.
“We need to see the Reserve Bank indicate a commitment to lowering the currency,” John Walley, chief executive of the New Zealand Manufacturers & Exporters Association, said this week in an e-mailed statement. He wanted Bollard to cut the cash rate.
Export Threat
Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd., the world’s biggest dairy exporter, yesterday reiterated that its payment to New Zealand farmers will be 12 percent lower this year because of falling prices and the currency.
The payment would have been revised lower were it not for “encouraging signs” in some international dairy markets, the Auckland-based company said.
Bollard reiterated he “expects to keep the cash rate at or below the current level through until the latter part of 2010.” By contrast, traders expected 86 basis points of increase within a year, according to a Credit Suisse index. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
All 10 economists surveyed last week by Bloomberg News forecast today’s move. All expected the rate will also be unchanged at the next review on Sept. 10.
New Zealand’s economy is probably in its seventh quarter of recession, according to the central bank’s June 11 forecasts. Today’s statement contains no new forecasts.
“Overall economic growth is evolving broadly in line with our forecasts in June” Bollard said. “The outlook remains highly uncertain.”
Housing Market
New Zealand’s exports are heavily weighted to soft commodities such as butter, cheese and wool and haven’t benefited from recent gains in hard commodity prices, he said.
The housing market may lead a recovery after second-quarter home prices rose for the first time since late 2007. There were 40 percent more property sales in June than a year earlier, the Real Estate Institute said on July 9.
Consumers are less pessimistic and business confidence is recovering, recent polls show.
The proportion of consumers who expect the economy will deteriorate over the next year fell to 41 percent in early July, the lowest level since March last year, according to a survey of 1,039 people by Melbourne-based Roy Morgan Research.
Business confidence rose to a 10-month high in July, ANZ National Bank Ltd. said yesterday, citing a survey of 402 companies. Firms were less pessimistic about profits and fewer expected to fire workers over the next year.
The jobless rate rose to a five-year high of 5 percent in the first quarter and may increase to 7.2 percent by mid-2010, the central bank forecast last month.
Winstone Pulp International Ltd. this week said it would close a North Island saw mill and fire 65 workers. Earlier this month, New Zealand Post, the state-owned postal service said it had cut 380 jobs since the start of the year.