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AUD & NZD: Flipping narrative
First-quarter wage data offered - in our view - enough motive for the Reserve Bank of Australia to keep tightening policy despite not coming in at screamingly elevated levels, but today’s employment figures in Australia may complicate any plans to hike again. Employment dropped 4k in April (expected +25k), which led the unemployment rate to rise from 3.5% to 3.7%. The details of the report are rather grim too: the drop was all due to full-time employment (-27k), while part-time hiring actually accelerated (+23k).
The release probably flips the narrative for AUD/NZD: from a potentially bullish opportunity to a growing chance that the recent 1.0600 recent lows (and important support) will be heavily tested. Still, we must remember there is close to nothing priced in terms of RBA tightening, so the room for a dovish re-pricing to hit AUD is limited.
On the NZD side, the Treasury announced its budget today, which came with a larger deficit, with a focus on reconstruction spending after the recent severe weather events. Somewhat surprisingly, the Treasury now sees the extra spending, combined with the tourism boost, as allowing New Zealand to dodge a recession – which is instead the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's baseline scenario, according to February’s projections. An improved economic outlook, and expansionary fiscal policy – paired with a surge in migration - also means price pressures may last longer, and puts pressure on the RBNZ to stay hawkish next week. A 25bp hike is our (and consensus) call, but the focus will mostly be on the new rate projections: more tightening may now be pencilled in after the budget, and this could lead to NZD outperforming AUD.
Francesco Pesole
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