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Roger J Kerr says Governor Wheeler will face many variables and conditions, and he will be watching Canada first. You agree?

Roger J Kerr says Governor Wheeler will face many variables and conditions, and he will be watching Canada first. You agree?

 By Roger J Kerr

A test of success for any central bank chief is whether they pontificate on the big decisions that have to be made or whether they are bold and decisive.

My take on Governor Wheeler is that he will be decisive when the time comes to increase the OCR and he will have a reasonable handle on how financial markets will subsequently react and leave overall monetary conditions in the economy.

The timing of when he will be forced to raise rates is off course the big debate in the marketplace.

Forward pricing in the moneymarkets today is a 0.15% increase in the OCR in January 2014, which does not tell us anything at all.

It is more art than science on the timing and fine judgements as to whether to go hard and scare off inflation pressures, or go softly-softly and run the risk of inflation getting a foothold that feeds on itself.

Depending on what happens to the weather, currency, export commodity prices and the residential property market over the next six months, Governor Wheeler could be pushing the button on OCR increases by September at the earliest or June 2014 at the latest.

Movements over coming months in the two-year swap rate will provide some guide as to how the aforementioned determining factors are playing out.

What we do know is that the economy is in a much stronger position to handle the drought negatives than what the RBNZ thought was the case before the GDP numbers last Thursday.

The closely related decision to be made that is just as important for Governor Wheeler is when and how he pulls the “macro-prudential measures” (“mpm”) trigger on the banks on the assumption that the property markets continues to run hot and the Kiwi dollar stays up above 0.8000?

If he is forced to slow down bank credit/lending through the mpm mechanism at some point later this year, it is again negative for the NZ dollar as interest rate increases will be pushed further back.

Governor Wheeler will be closely observing events in Canada over coming months where the mpm card has been recently played.

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Roger J Kerr is a partner at PwC. He specialises in fixed interest securities and is a commentator on economics and markets. More commentary and useful information on fixed interest investing can be found at rogeradvice.com

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4 Comments

There will be no interest rate hikes in 2013, you can be assured of that.

More likely to be cuts.

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Roger, I didn't think there was much of a "debate in the marketplace" about OCR, certainly not as far as 2013 is concerned.

Didn't Mr Wheeler state pretty clearly in the last statement that there would be no OCR increase in 2013, barring unforeseen circumstances?

I don't think a positive GDP number changes the picture at all, when other factors remain firmly negative and there is no sign of tightening from any of the other central banks.

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For what is worth, I completely under estimated the effect of the drought. I had a drive in the country of late, and I have never seen it so dry! The rain we had recently, left no mark! 

Never have I thought I would be wishing for rain...

HGW

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"The timing of when he will be FORCED to raise interest rates" Herein lies the problem. It is no use waiting till a CB reaches this point (It's not his job to micro-manage the economy). Rates should already be on the way up with an economy (overall) comparatively booming and a real estate market on fire! Just the same mistake Bollard made. Now  t's just inconveniently early for Jokey. He'd rather it happened next year.

Ergophobia

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