ADVERTISEMENT

International

New Zealand Suffers Deeper-Than-Expected Recession; Kiwi Drops

Pedestrians cross a traffic signal at Cuba Street in Wellington, New Zealand, on Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. New Zealand has eliminated community transmission of the Covid-19 virus, but it continues to catch infections at the border and has experienced some minor community outbreaks. Photographer Birgit Krippner/Bloomberg Photographer: Birgit Krippner/Bloomberg (Birgit Krippner/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- New Zealand’s economy suffered a deeper-than-expected recession in the second and third quarters as high interest rates curbed demand. The local dollar fell to a two-year low.

Gross domestic product declined 1.0% in the three months through September, Statistics New Zealand said Thursday in Wellington. Economists expected a 0.2% contraction. In the second quarter, GDP shrank a revised 1.1% compared to an initially reported 0.2% drop.  

A previous recession was revised away and the economy is forecast to recover over 2025 now that the Reserve Bank, having tamed inflation, has started to lower its Official Cash Rate. But the GDP data are much worse than any forecasters expected, including the RBNZ, prompting investors to increase bets on deeper rate cuts.  

“Today’s GDP figures delivered a significant downside surprise that’s likely to see a rethink by the RBNZ on how low the OCR will need to go this cycle,” said Sharon Zollner, chief New Zealand economist at ANZ Bank in Auckland. “The risk that the OCR will end up lower than our current forecast of a 3.5% trough has clearly risen.”

The New Zealand dollar fell more than a quarter of a US cent after the report to as low as 56.13 cents. The currency has slumped more than 11% this quarter, the worst performer among major developed market peers, reflecting an expected divergence between New Zealand and US policy rates next year and concerns over Chinese growth.

The yield on policy-sensitive two-year bonds dropped seven basis points to 3.69%.

GDP Revisions

GDP fell 1.5% in the third quarter from the year-earlier quarter, more than three times the expected 0.4% decline.

Statistics New Zealand made a range of adjustments to the GDP series, revising up earlier out-turns so that a previously reported recession in the six months through March 2023 is no longer recorded.

“While the June quarter growth rate has been revised downward, the overall level of economic activity has been revised upward over a longer period,” the agency said.

Still, high interest rates have pushed the manufacturing and service sectors into extended downturns, unemployment is rising and house prices are falling. 

Further cooling activity, population growth is slowing as fewer immigrants arrive and more New Zealanders leave the country in pursuit of better jobs and wages abroad.

The RBNZ began cutting rates in August and stepped up the pace with 50 basis-point reductions in both October and November, taking the OCR to 4.25%. It has said a third reduction of that magnitude is likely at its next decision in February.

In the wake of today’s GDP report, investors increased bets that the central bank will cut its benchmark rate to 3% by the end of next year, swaps data show. That’s some 50 basis points lower than what the RBNZ projected last month.

While the Federal Reserve this morning lowered rates for a third consecutive time, taking the federal funds rate to a range of 4.25%-4.5%, it reined in the number of cuts it expects to make in 2025. That may see the RBNZ’s benchmark rate fall below the Fed’s.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“The central bank needs to push rates below neutral to revive growth. Revisions to the GDP series haven’t changed the path ahead for the economy or the policy response that we think is needed to counter the weakness.”

— James McIntyre, economist

To read the full note, click here

The main drivers of the third-quarter contraction were manufacturing and construction, today’s report showed. Farming output increased, led by dairy.

GDP per capita shrank 1.2% from the second quarter for its eighth straight quarterly decline.

--With assistance from Matthew Burgess.

(Updates with economist comments)

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.