Roger Kerr posted on March 28, 2011 13:44
The consensus view amongst the local economist fraternity and moneymarket pricing is that short-term interest rates will move across the page for the next nine months, however after that the outlook becomes considerably murkier. The speed at which short-term interest rates increase in early 2012 will have a lot to do with how steep the interest rate yield curve becomes in the meantime.
I see the rate of increase in 2012 being particularly sharp as the interest rate markets realise that the RBNZ is too far behind the 8-ball in terms of monetary policy settings. The steepening of the yield curve over coming months will come from US-driven long-term interest rates rising, whilst one to three year swap rates remain stable at current levels. A very steep-sloping yield curve (long term rates substantially above short-term rates) just tells you that there is inevitability about increasing short-term interest rates.
I often take my lead on where US long-term interest rates are headed from the risk management decisions of large US corporate borrowers. Currently those borrowers are issuing a stack of new corporate bonds to extend the duration of their portfolios and improve liquidity. The better credit market conditions with investors seeking yield pick-up are attracting the corporate issuers to meet the investor demand. The US corporate borrowers also know how well their businesses are now travelling and that eventually the Federal Reserve will need to progressively remove the current monetary policy stimulus. They are fixing their interest rates through the corporate bond issuance and fixing for long terms. These actions tell you a lot about how they see US market interest rates moving over coming years.
Whilst the US housing market has a long way to go to restore overall economic wealth, the bond market is already starting to price the higher inflation and borrowing demand ahead. My take is that the CFO’s and Treasurers of large US corporate borrowers are closer to what is really going on in the US economy than the Wall Street economists and Connecticut fund managers. The corporate borrowers see US long-term interest rates higher and I don’t think they have got this wrong.
US employment data out later this week should be another strong number. After the hic-up in Japan that drove US 10-year bond yields down to 3.22%, the bond yields have already reversed to 3.44%. We have not seen this upward move transfer through into our 10-year swap rates (yet!). The strong investor demand for NZ Government bonds last week seems to have counteracted the higher US bond yields. However, it appears to be only a matter of time before increasing US bond yields lift our 10-year swap rates back to 5.50% (currently 5.20%) and higher.
The strong historical correlation between US employment and US bond yields also suggests rising long-term interest rates.
NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR MARKET COMMENTARY
The Kiwi Dollar rebounds back to 0.7500, but where do we go from here?
The NZ dollar has traded in a volatile and wildly fluctuating range between 0.7120 and 0.7570 over the last 10 days. In a period when very low interest rates in New Zealand were supposed to reduce NZD exchange rate volatility, the Kiwi has been buffeted around by both global and local events/developments. The day-to-day currency market volatility displays no signs of abating as global investors switch erratically between positions of “risk on” and “risk off” in response to economic and political news. The NZD is bought and sold in accordance with that changeable daily investor sentiment.
The rebound in the Kiwi over recent days has been as spectacular as the sell-off when Japanese currency speculators were “stopped-out” of long NZD/short JPY positions just after the Japanese earthquake when the Yen strengthened. Since then a number of forces have culminated together to reverse the NZD direction and return it to where it came from above 0.7500:-
§ The Australian dollar is suddenly back in favour as commodity prices reversed back up again after the initial sell-off immediately after the Japanese earthquake. The AUD has broken above the previous resistance against the USD at $1.0150 and trades a cent higher currently in the markets.
§ The NZ Government Debt Management Office took the opportunity of strong investor demand last week by upping the weekly tender amount of new issue bonds. It was clear that many of the Asian and US investors, seeking the safety and diversification of NZ Government Bonds in an uncertain world, were not simultaneously hedging forward their FX risk. These investors just bought the NZD’s outright to buy the bonds, pushing the currency back up again.
§ GDP growth figures for the December 2010 quarter released last Thursday were a 0.2% increase over the previous quarter. A result that avoided the double-dip recession tag, however the forex markets must have been positioned to expect a negative number, as the NZD immediately appreciated as short-sold positions in the market were forced to be reversed. Despite the disruptions of the Christchurch earthquake, it is not all doom and gloom in the NZ economy.
§ The USD itself has remained under pressure as the global FX markets price for European interest rate increases next month. However, the Euro has been unable to attract “follow-through” buying above $1.4000 as some ECB Board-members tone down their rhetoric about the need for interest rate increases to contain inflation.
Will the NZD/USD rate continue higher to 0.7700/0.7800 over coming weeks or drift off again towards 0.7200? There is sufficient volatility and uncertainty about to cause a move either way; however a return to 0.7200 appears a higher probability based on offshore currency movements. The weakness in the USD against the Euro to $1.4000 has been a little surprising given the continuing improvement in US economic data across the board. US employment and PMI (Purchasing Managers Index) data later this week should reinforce the view that the US economy is now expanding under its own steam.
The US Federal Reserve is starting to recognise this improvement and short-term swap interest rates are already pricing-in US interest rate increases for later this year. If the Europeans start to get cold feet on their interest rate increases due to ongoing uncertainties on how the financial stability/debt bail-out packages for the southern states will operate, the USD should make gains back to $1.3500 against the Euro.
Where crude oil prices go from current elevated levels is also a major determinant of general commodity price direction (and thus AUD and NZD direction). Middle-East political developments have been behind the recent oil price increases due to supply worries. Whilst an early resolution to the Libyan situation is unlikely, the latest move up in oil prices may have run its course. A stronger USD from here and no further increases in commodity prices should limit additional AUD gains against the USD. Current NZD/USD exchange rates above 0.7500 appear to be another forward hedging opportunity for USD importers.