New Zealand’s manufacturing sales rose 3.6% in the first quarter, reversing a -0.5% outcome in the prior period. The turnaround points to a firmer near-term performance for the sector after the earlier contraction.
The quarterly shift represents a 4.1 percentage point swing between the two readings, with growth returning after the previous decline. No further breakdown was provided in the release.
Economic Outlook and Implications for Monetary Policy
We see the unexpected 3.6% jump in first-quarter manufacturing sales as a game-changer, reversing the previous quarter’s decline. This data challenges the prevailing view of a slowing economy, especially after the last GDP report showed growth was nearly flat. This forces us to reconsider the narrative that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) would be cutting rates later this year.
This strong economic signal complicates the RBNZ’s next move, especially with annual inflation still stubbornly high at 3.8%, well outside the target 1-3% band. Before this data, the market was pricing in a high probability of at least one rate cut by the end of 2026. We now believe those expectations will be pushed back significantly, possibly into 2027.
Market Impact and Investment Strategy
Consequently, we are looking for the New Zealand dollar to strengthen in the coming weeks. Higher-for-longer interest rate expectations will likely attract capital, increasing demand for the currency. Historically, similar periods of unexpected economic strength have seen the NZD/USD pair rally by 2-3% over the following month.
For interest rate derivatives, the play is to position for the yield curve to reflect a more hawkish RBNZ. This could involve selling futures contracts on the 90-day bank bill to bet against rate cuts. We see value in this strategy as the market reprices its rate expectations to align with this new, stronger manufacturing data.