The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) has signaled a cautious stance on future interest rate adjustments, with Chief Economist Paul Conway explicitly stating the bank "won't be trigger happy" with rate hikes.
This message was echoed by Governor Breman, who conveyed confidence that inflation is expected to be back within the target range in the first quarter and will reach the 2% midpoint within the next 12 months. Despite this optimistic inflation outlook, the RBNZ stressed that its policy path is not pre-set and will remain data-dependent, indicating no immediate urgency for further monetary tightening.
This steady-to-dovish tone from RBNZ officials led to a decline in the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) and, through regional correlation, the Australian Dollar (AUD) during Asian trading, as it tempered market expectations for imminent rate increases. The Australian dollar's movement was largely spillover-driven, distinct from its domestic rate outlook which still leans towards potential further hikes from the RBA.
Data sourced from public RSS feeds and News APIs.