Will RBNZ Halt NZD Rally?

 | Jun 25, 2019 04:23PM ET

h2 Canadian dollarKathy Lien, Managing Director Of FX Strategy For BK Asset Managementh3 Daily FX Market Roundup June 25, 2019/h3

Tuesday’s rally marked the sixth consecutive day of strength for the New Zealand dollar. In the short span of a few days, NZD/USD has risen from a low of .6490 to a high above .6650. Broad-based U.S. dollar weakness played a big role in the move but the New Zealand dollar has been one of the strongest currencies because its gains were validated by better-than-expected economic data. We learned Monday night that while the country’s trade surplus narrowed, the balance fell less than expected and more importantly, exports and imports increased in May. In fact exports hit a record high of NZ$5.8B on the back of strong demand for milk powder and infant formula. Milk-powder exports rose 32% while food preparations, which included infant formula rose 41%. China’s economy may be slowing but the Chinese are not cutting back on what they now see as essentials – butter, milk, and high-quality baby formula. Data such as this will play a big role in the Reserve Bank's monetary policy announcement.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s monetary policy decision is right around the corner and many investors are wondering if the central bank will put a halt to NZD/USD’s rally. The currency pair’s price action suggests that the market is looking for less and not more dovishness but everyone’s concern about slower global growth should be the RBNZ’s as well. The last time they met, the RBNZ cut interest rates by 25bp. The decision took NZD/USD to a 6-month low but the drop was short-lived because the central bank suggested they were one-and-done. Since then we haven’t seen a clear trend in New Zealand’s economy. The latest GDP numbers were strong and service-sector activity is up. Manufacturing activity, inflation and spending are lower but that may not be enough to convince the RBNZ that another rate cut is needed. There is no doubt that the global economy is weakening and it would be remiss for the RBNZ not to express concerns but how the New Zealand dollar responds will depend on how aggressive the RBNZ thinks they need to be about easing. If they feel that another preventive rate cut is needed, NZD/USD will reverse its gains quickly but if they leave most of their policy statement unchanged, NZD/USD could break 67 cents easily.