Central-Bank Countdown: RBNZ And BoE On Deck

 | May 11, 2017 07:53

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

Two major central banks have monetary policy meetings in the next 24 hours and while no changes to policy are expected, these currencies are trading firmly ahead of their announcements. The best performer Wednesday was the New Zealand dollar, which traded higher against all of the major currencies. There’s no question that investors are looking for optimism from the central bank — especially after the NZ shadow board said the RBNZ should adopt a tightening bias. Taking a look the table below, the Reserve Bank should be satisfied with recent improvements in New Zealand’s economy. Consumer spending is up thanks to a stronger labor market. Inflation and dairy prices are on the rise. Consumer and business confidence weakened but that could turn around as service and manufacturing activity continues to improve. The housing market is softer, which the RBNZ wants to see. All of this argues for optimism from the Reserve Bank next week and outperformance for NZD. At the last monetary policy meeting, policy makers wanted the currency to fall further and keep monetary policy accommodative but they also recognized that inflation could be rising in the months ahead. At the time, they felt CPI would return to target in the medium term and growth would pick up, which is exactly what we’ve seen over the past 6 weeks. If the RBNZ grows less dovish or better yet starts talking about raising interest rates, NZD/USD will hit 70 cents. However if there are no major changes to the monetary policy statement and RBNZ Governor Wheeler, who speaks an hour later, is cautious and/or emphasizes the consequences of a strong currency (AUD/NZD is down 3 cents since the last meeting), NZD will drop back below 69 cents.

The Canadian and Australian dollars also traded higher with the loonie rising on the back of stronger oil prices. WTI Crude rose more than 4% intraday and ended the NY session up 3%. It's difficult to say whether USD/CAD has peaked. Technically, it certainly appears to be the case and oil's rise supports a top. Yet fundamentally, the odds are still stacked against the loonie so its best to watch for a clean break of 1.3645, this month’s low before selling USD/CAD.