New Zealand’s economy shrinks in Q4, changing rate outlook
WELLINGTON -New Zealand’s economy missed forecasts for growth in the fourth quarter and instead shrank 0.6 percent, official data showed on Thursday, raising the chances of a recession and making further interest rate hikes less likely.
Gross domestic product (GDP) failed to meet analysts’ expectations of a 0.2- percent contraction in the December quarter and was well below the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) forecast of 0.7 percent growth. It was a reversal from revised growth of 1.7 percent seen in the third quarter.
The weakness in the economy is broad-based and conditions are already recessionary for manufacturing, retail, trade and accommodation, according to the Statistics New Zealand data.
The central bank and treasury had both forecast the country would enter a shallow recession in the second quarter of 2023.
Economists said the weak data released on Thursday meant it was possible the country was already in recession, particularly given the impact that severe weather in January and February was likely to have on the economy.
Article continues after this advertisement“The outlook for Q1 remains gloomy,” Capital Economics said in a note.
Article continues after this advertisementNew Zealand spent two quarters in recession in 2020 because of tight restrictions when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, but prior to that the economy had not contracted since late 2010.
Regardless of whether the country is entering a recession, the economy is much less overheated than the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) had expected.
The central bank has undertaken its most aggressive policy tightening since 1999, when the official cash rate was introduced, lifting it by 450 basis points since October 2021 to 4.75 percent.
The market is betting the RBNZ’s plan to hike the official cash rate (OCR) by a further 75 basis points this year to 5.5 percent by the third quarter will be pared back.
“We see no need for the RBNZ to go to 5.50 percent, which would risk causing unnecessary losses in activity and employment,” Citi analysts said in a note, predicting GDP contractions in the first and second quarter.
NZ bank bill futures have surged as the market priced in a lower peak for RBNZ rates. The market is now 50-50 on whether the RBNZ hikes 25 basis points (bps) in April, while the terminal rate is seen at 5.11 percent rather than the bank’s projection of 5.5 percent.
The New Zealand dollar was down before the data but extended the fall to be off 0.6 percent at $0.6145. Two-year swaps are near a two-month low of 4.925% having fallen sharply overnight as bank sector concerns drove down bond yields globally.
ASB Bank said in a note that the data weakness and increased financial market jitters overseas suggested less urgency for RBNZ rate hikes.
“Uncertainty is elevated, but we have shaded down our 50 basis point April OCR call to a 25 basis point hike,” the note said.
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