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Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) Governor Anna Breman's commentary was exactly what you'd expect from a central banker who just held rates while half her own committee voted to hike: a tidy list of reasons the bank is right to do nothing today, paired with a tidy list of reasons it will absolutely do something soon. She reaffirmed the inflation focus, brushed off the Budget as marginal next to supply chains and Crude Oil, and said the committee agrees the cash rate needs to be higher going forward. Just not yet, apparently.
For the Kiwi, this is the hawkish-hold flavour already in the price, and Breman's remarks reinforce direction without offering urgency. Her nod to a weak labour market suppressing wage growth is the tell, the same dovish escape hatch the RBNZ leans on whenever the cost of acting starts to look heavier than the cost of waiting. It's consistent with the new policy path, but it also explains why the bank chose to sit on its hands while three of its own members wanted to move today.
Key Breman Highlights
Fully focused on achieving inflation target.
Supply chains, oil prices to have bigger impact than what's in the government budget.
Committee sees inflationary pressures going forward, agrees cash rate needs to be higher going forward.
Hearing export-focused firms doing well but worried about the uncertain environment.
Weak labor market will suppress wage growth.












