Rupiah set for central bank relief as RBNZ puts pressure on kiwi

Bloomberg

Two of the year’s worst-performing Asia-Pacific currencies are poised to enter the fourth quarter with dramatically different support from their central banks.
New Zealand officials are expected to keep the possibility of a rate cut on the table when they meet on Thursday, wary of a slump in business confidence even as growth has shown recent signs of picking up. That stands in stark contrast to Indonesia, where policy makers are forecast to hike rates for a fifth time in as many months to safeguard against capital flight.
It sets the stage for a rupiah rebound and kiwi underperformance through the end of the year even as both currencies suffer from trade-war angst and a downturn in emerging-market sentiment.
Wellington appears unfazed by foreign-exchange weakness, given it boosts export competitiveness and spurs inflation. Meanwhile, Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo is showing no sign of backtracking policies — including currency-market intervention and import controls — intended to curb the rupiah’s rout.
New Zealand business confidence plunged to a 10-year low in August, helping push the kiwi to 0.6501 per dollar earlier this month, the lowest since 2016. That raises the stakes for September’s survey due less than 24 hours before Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s decision.
While the currency has recovered in recent days on stronger-than-expected growth data, investors remain wary of a rate cut.
The market-implied RBNZ policy rate in one-year’s time has fallen to 1.69 percent, based on overnight index swap pricing, down from more than 2 percent as recently as April and below the central bank’s current cash rate of 1.75 percent.
In contrast, 23 of 31 economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect Indonesia to raise rates by 25 basis points on Sept. 27, while six are calling for 50 basis points of tightening.

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