|
Friday 17th October 2008 |
Text too small? |
Consumer prices rose 1.5% in the third quarter for an annual pace of 5.1%, an 18-year high, according to the consensus of estimates collected by Reuters. Prices of food, petrol, electricity and government charges drove the acceleration in annual inflation.
The Reserve Bank last month cut the OCR by a greater-than-expected 50 basis points while forecasting annual inflation would reach 4.9% in the latest three months. Governor Alan Bollard on Sept. 11 said a marked slowdown in the local economy and deteriorating world growth would cool inflation. Since then, Evidence has mounted that the US is lurching into recession and the global economy may be heading for a prolonged slump.
"Inflation concerns are receding rapidly," Westpac chief economist Brendan O'Donovan said in a report. "A worsening economic outlook as the international credit crunch bites will see previous capacity constraints relax."
The New Zealand dollar has declined about 8% this month and may extend its slide with the prospect of lower interest rates, falling commodity prices and weakening world demand.
"We don't expect the September quarter CPI print to get in the way of an aggressive easing cycle from the RBNZ," ANZ Bank economists said in a report yesterday.
The consensus of economists is for Bollard to reduce the OCR by 100 basis points to 6.5% on October 23 and to flag the potential for more reductions to revive an economy that may be in its fourth quarter of contraction.
A survey yesterday showed New Zealand manufacturing activity fell in September, its fifth monthly decline as companies trimmed production and got fewer orders.
No comments yet
PYS - PaySauce to announce F26 full year results on 27 May 2026
PEB - Draft LCD Proposes Medicare Coverage for Triage and Triage
MEL - Meridian Energy monthly operating report for April 2026
FBU - Sale of South Australian property
AIR - Air New Zealand market update
May 14th Morning Report
PEB - Pacific Edge Placement Increased to NZ$25.4 Million
Radius Care Reports Earnings Growth and 50% Higher Dividend
May 13th Morning Report
Pacific Edge launches capital raise of NZ$24 million