New Zealand inflation probably slowed in the third quarter, keeping the annual rate below the Reserve Bank's target band for a fourth straight quarter and giving the bank more reason to cut interest rates again as soon as this month.
The consumers price index (CPI) fell to 0.2 per cent in the third quarter from 0.4 per cent three months earlier, according to a Reuters survey. The annual rate may also have slowed to 0.2 per cent, the figures scheduled for release next Friday are expected to show.
Annual inflation hasn't been within the central bank's 1 per cent to 3 per cent target range since the third quarter of last year, when it scraped in at 1 per cent. The bank cut the official cash rate a quarter point to 2.75 per cent at the September 10 monetary policy statement and next reviews rates on October 29, before the next full Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) on December 10.
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Helping keep a lid on consumer prices in the third quarter was the ACC's change to "vehicle risk ratings" to calculate ACC motor vehicle levies on July 1, reducing the levy portion of vehicle registration by $40-$170. Subsidised doctor visits would also weigh on inflation.