As we move through the second quarter of 2015 we consider this question and note that while the outlook is constructive there are some risks to be wary of.
The currency enters the quarter close to where it began the year against the pound sterling, a strong comeback if we consider that the GBP/NZD shot above 2.08 at one point. We are now seeing the pair at 1.9520.
Against the US dollar we see the February low of 0.7176 is a memory, the NZD/USD has formed a base and is trading higher at 0.7602.
Parity against the Aussie dollar still remains a prospect; AUD/NZD is now at 1.0177.
When considering the outlook for the kiwi dollar we see two drivers of importance at this stage: Actions at the RBNZ and the funadamental performance of the economy.
On both counts we see little reason to second-guess the NZD, however we would caution that one ‘chink in the armour’ could relate to any return-to-strength in the USD.
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The aim here is to try and beat the historically expensive kiwi dollar into submission. A strong currency tends to curb global enthusiasm for NZ products as they become more expensive.
Indeed, the RBNZ often does follow its rhetoric with action.
But, weakness from this kind of action has proven temporary. Why?
The New Zealand dollar was propelled by comments made by the country's Prime Minister John Key on the 9th of April who stated in a CNBC interview that in his opinion intervention does not work.
Key was referring to the kiwi dollar’s strength against the Australian dollar as the pair continues to hover near parity.
The PM went on to point out that intervention only works at the points of extreme and is ultimately ineffective against a long sustained trend.
“With RBNZ resolutely set against lowering rates in the foreseeable future the kiwi remains the preeminent carry trade in the industrialised world and that factor continues to prop the unit against G-10 currencies,” says Boris Schlossberg, analyst at BK Asset Management.
The picture painted is one of a strong NZD supported by a strong economy.
However, an all-out bull scenario is not priced into the future performance of the currency owing to the prediction that the RBNZ will not raise interest rates in 2015.
“The RBNZ will not be called upon to hike interest rates and bring it to an end, simply because there is no inflation to worry about,” says a Stephen Toplis at BNZ.
Interestingly though, “it is fair to say that near-term inflation will be sufficiently weak that the RBNZ may yet be bullied into lowering rates.”
This goes back to what we were saying earlier about the readiness of the RBNZ to jump into the markets in order to thwart the NZD’s advance.
While actively selling currency reserves has been noted by John Key as being pointless, achieving the same goal via cutting interest rates is a viable option.
However, we see this as a risky choice, particularly with the NZ property market looking so hot.
BNZ say:
“The New Zealand economy continues to hum along nicely with growth near potential and expected to stay that way through 2015. It’s a job-creating expansion which is slowly putting pressure on capacity. But, unlike normal cycles,
“Against this backdrop, the NZD will remain well supported but should still succumb to the commencement of the tightening cycle in the US.”
The dollar remains in a longer-term cyclical uptrend, and most global currencies are forecast to kneel down before it in coming months, the NZD included.
As such, BNZ strategists confirm they are awaiting a return to 0.76 and above in NZD/USD which would present an opportunity to enter a medium-term short position.
The analysts are targeting a fall to 0.72.
NZD shrugged off the 10% decline in dairy prices at the 2 April auction, partly because of the speculative trader interest to be long NZD/AUD in anticipation of an Australian interest rate cut.
“We think another negative (or even flat) auction result will bring that commodity price story to front of mind. We anticipate a period of subdued dairy auction prices over the coming six months, thanks to an overhang of milk supply,” says BNZ’s Raiko Shareef.
If it were to be delivered then we could well expect a violent bout of NZD weakness.
However, as mentioned, with the economy looking strong we would not bet against the kiwi dollar.