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Just caught an interesting take from ANZ on where New Zealand's central bank might be heading with interest rates. They're forecasting the Reserve Bank will move pretty aggressively - expecting three consecutive 25 basis point hikes spread across July, September, and October. That would push the official cash rate up to 3%.
What's notable here is ANZ's reasoning. They're essentially saying inflation pressures are building enough that keeping rates at stimulative levels doesn't make sense anymore. The central bank's probably getting uncomfortable holding rates too low given where prices are heading.
Sharon Zollner, ANZ's Chief Economist, made an interesting point about this rate hiking cycle. She's calling it a very strong move, but also signaling they don't think rates need to climb all the way to 3.5% like they previously thought. Once it hits 3%, they expect it to just sit there. That's a pretty specific forecast about where the hiking stops.
The broader picture here is about how aggressively central banks are reassessing interest rates as inflation dynamics shift. These rate decisions obviously ripple through currency markets and asset prices, so traders watching the RBNZ are probably paying close attention to whether ANZ's forecast actually plays out or if the bank surprises with a different pace of interest rate moves.