By Lucy Craymer
WELLINGTON New Zealand's central bank held the cash rate steady at 5.5% on Wednesday, but noted inflation remained too high and that further policy tightening might be needed if price pressures did not ease.
The decision to hold the cash rate was in line with expectations from 28 economists in a Reuters poll, all of whom forecast the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) to leave the cash rate at a near 15-year high for the fourth consecutive meeting.
"The Committee is confident that the current level of the OCR is restricting demand," the statement said. "However, ongoing excess demand and inflationary pressures are of concern, given the elevated level of core inflation."
Markets read the RBNZ's commentary as hawkish with the New Zealand dollar shooting up 0.9% to $0.6190, two-year swap rates up 15 basis points to 5.23% and bank bill futures down as much as 11 ticks.
The statement added that if inflationary pressures were to be stronger than anticipated, the cash rate would likely need to increase further.
It also raised its forecast cash rate peak to 5.7%, a signal it might have to hike again.
"Interest rates will need to remain at a restrictive level for a sustained period of time, so that consumer price inflation returns to target and to support maximum sustainable employment," the statement said.
The RBNZ was one of the first central banks to withdraw pandemic-era monetary stimulus and has lifted rates by 525 basis points since October 2021 to curb inflation. It is the most aggressive tightening since the cash rate was introduced in 1999.
New Zealand's annual inflation has come off in recent quarters and is currently 5.6%, with expectations that it will return to its target band by the second half of 2024.
The rate hikes have sharply slowed the economy but recent data showed it was tracking above central bank expectations.
The RBNZ decision is the first since New Zealand elected a new government headed by Prime Minister Christopher Luxon last month.
The new centre-right government has said it will return the central bank to a single inflation targeting mandate, removing the requirement for the RBNZ to consider employment when setting the cash rate.
(Reporting by Lucy Craymer. Editing by Sam Holmes.)