SYDNEY: The New Zealand dollar and local yields slumped on Wednesday after the Reserve Bank delivered a dovish rate hike and signalled that increases are essentially done, a shock result that sent the Aussie jumping against the kiwi.
The kiwi dollar fell 1% to a three-week low of $0.6180, nearing a major support level of the 200-day moving average at $0.6155.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand raised interest rates on Wednesday by 25 basis points to 5.5%, after considering a pause.
The RBNZ also sees rates peaking at the current level of 5.5%, before rate cuts commence from the third quarter of next year, according to the latest forecasts.
Market bets were split between hiking by 25 bps or 50 prior to the decision, with many wagering that rates can hit as high as 6% given the government’s budget this month is set to add to inflationary pressures, and RBNZ’s record of surprising markets on the hawkish side.
Benchmark two-year interest rate swaps, which hit a 14-year high of 5.5750% earlier in the day, fell 32 basis points on the day to 5.1750%.
That saw the Aussie gaining ground on the kiwi, up 0.9% at NZ$1.0673, reversing a recent declining trend, which was driven by expectations of a dovish Reserve Bank of Australia and a hawkish RBNZ.
“It’s an indication that the tightening cycle is over.
No-one was really expecting that,“ said Jason Wong, a strategist at Bank of New Zealand in Wellington.
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“There’s cuts priced in the second-half of next year but the market, in recession and with the tightening cycle over, will want to price an easing earlier than what the Reserve Bank’s indicated.”
That also brought the Aussie 0.2% lower against the US dollar to $0.6597, the lowest in a month and just a whisker away from its 2023 low of $0.6565.
Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, expects the Aussie to set a new year-to-date low.
“Our expectations for the Australia-US interest rate differentials to become more negative and China’s disappointing economic growth can further weigh on AUD/USD.”