The New Zealand dollar will probably decline against its trans-Tasman counterpart this week as signs of a revival in the Australian economy prompt that nation's central bank to remove its easing bias, turning attention to the next hike rather than the next cut.
The kiwi will probably trade between 91 Australian cents and 93.70 cents, according to a BusinessDesk survey of eight currency strategists and traders. Four expect the kiwi to decline against the Aussie, while one expects a gain and three say it will remain stable. The kiwi recently bought 92.47 Australian cents.
The New Zealand dollar touched an eight-year high against the Aussie last month as New Zealand's economy benefits from a boom in soft commodities such as dairy while Australia's economy weakens on waning demand for its mining resources. Still, stronger inflation data in Australia may prompt the central bank to remove its easing bias at its meeting tomorrow, crimping the kiwi's 14 per cent advance over the past year.
"The RBA will remove its easing bias this week," said Imre Speizer, senior market strategist at Westpac Banking Corp in New Zealand. "Markets may then jump the gun and start to price in some interest rate hikes over the year. That should be a catalyst to push the Aussie up over the kiwi."
With benchmark interest rates at a record low 2.5 per cent in both countries, traders currently expect Australian interest rates to remain largely on hold this year while New Zealand rates are expected to rise 122 basis points, according to the Overnight Swap Curve.