Global inflation has peaked, but it is expected to take more time before domestic inflation falls to within the Reserve Bank's one to three per cent target range.
Salt Funds Management economist Bevan Graham says people should be wary of calls for early and aggressive interest rate cuts, given current economic conditions and inflation.
"I think we are in a 'new normal', or even 'old normal' environment, in which inflation is going to be a bit tougher to keep under control.
"I think we're going to see a period in which central banks [will need] to be a lot more active than ... over the last 15 years, to keep inflation in check."
While most central banks around the world indicate that interest rate hikes have peaked, the Reserve Bank is yet to rule them out, as population growth continues to drive non-tradeable inflation, such as rents.
While Salt's latest global report is focused on the United States and European markets, Graham says the major Asian markets of Japan and China are also ones to watch.
Graham says Japan looks as though it might escape a prolonged period of low economic growth and deflation.
However, China's future is more uncertain.
"Much of what ails the Chinese economy is structural in nature including debt issues, demographic challenges, and geopolitical tensions. These all point to weaker growth prospects in the period ahead. That suggests more policy easing is likely - the risk being it remains reactive and too timid."
Turning to New Zealand, Graham says the Reserve Bank is the first to hike interest rates, and may be the last to cut them, given a long list of negatives for the economy.
"We believe the first half of 2024 will be the toughest period yet for the economy. Ongoing pass-through of higher interest rates, slowing employment growth, weaker business investment, and softer global growth all paint a picture of broad-based weakness in activity in the period ahead.
"The bottom line is we believe the RBNZ has done enough tightening, but we don't expect the first cut in interest rates to come until November this year."
Graham says the outlook for New Zealand equities will continue to reflect the ongoing economic conditions and high interest rate environment.
"Overall, our base-case scenario is unchanged, with a trough in earnings for New Zealand cyclicals expected around mid-CY24 (calendar year 2024), followed by a gradual resumption of earnings growth."
In the meantime, he says investors are likely to continue to favour global equities over New Zealand assets.
"The upshot for markets of the current inflection point between a period of restrictive monetary policy and a neutral period, is that benign returns can still be expected, unless a sentiment swing on the interest rate outlook or on consumers' optimism and willingness to spend disrupts the central scenario."
3 comments
What did you expect
Posted on 31-01-2024 22:33 | By Get our roads
when you let 10s of thousands of immigrants into NZ with no housing, unstable employers and COVID, when all overseas NZers wanted to come home too. Self inflicted destruction of your own Country. That will take years of recovery. Not to mention the extreme weather events going on here, wars in Countries that we rely on for goods that we can supply to our own if we wanted to,, wake up NZ, it's not all doom and gloom but it ain't pretty. If greed and money and a little Country trying to compete with the rest of the world for market share didn't exist, we would be sweet as, but no, greed and money always wins. NZ stopped being NZ in the 90s. It ain't ever coming back. Now, money talks, human decency is long gone!!!!! And so have NZers.
Of course...
Posted on 01-02-2024 07:47 | By This Guy
Need to make profits every year no matter what, and recently they've been using this magic word called "inflation" to blame their greed on. So prices go up and quality goes down - The customers lose, but the shareholders will win big!
Inflation wont come down
Posted on 01-02-2024 08:38 | By an_alias
We might get a flat line for a while but the last govt has set it in stone, it will go up.
The RBNZ can't change the HUGE inflation set in place from crazy spending during Covid on NOTHING and the lunacy of locking down the country.
RBNZ has no tools to stop that and lets face it are controlled by the govt.
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