News
OCR rises but Bollard surprisingly dovish
Thursday 28th of October 2004
Bollard raised the official cash rate (OCR), which directly affect floating mortgage rates, from 6.25% to 6.5%.
But he said that current monetary policy settings "are now doing enough to ensure price stability." Some economists had expected an outside chance that the OCR would go to 6.75% today and many had been thinking there was a very good chance of it going to that level in December.
The currency markets reacted immediately, pushing the New Zealand dollar down half a US cent to 68.90 US cents. The reaction in wholesale interest rate markets was more subdued with the 90-day bank bills little changed while the December 90-day bank bill futures slipped from implying the physical bills will be at 6.83% in December to 6.75% by then.
Craig Ebert, an economist at Bank of New Zealand, says that he now rates the chance of a rate hike in December at just 20%, down from 50% before today's move. "At the margin, it's a bit more dovish than we had expected," he says.
Read More - Opens in a new window
But he said that current monetary policy settings "are now doing enough to ensure price stability." Some economists had expected an outside chance that the OCR would go to 6.75% today and many had been thinking there was a very good chance of it going to that level in December.
The currency markets reacted immediately, pushing the New Zealand dollar down half a US cent to 68.90 US cents. The reaction in wholesale interest rate markets was more subdued with the 90-day bank bills little changed while the December 90-day bank bill futures slipped from implying the physical bills will be at 6.83% in December to 6.75% by then.
Craig Ebert, an economist at Bank of New Zealand, says that he now rates the chance of a rate hike in December at just 20%, down from 50% before today's move. "At the margin, it's a bit more dovish than we had expected," he says.
Read More - Opens in a new window
Comments (0)