Our new analytical note shows that monetary policy decisions that surprise financial markets lead to changes in interest rates and the New Zealand dollar exchange rate.
Material monetary policy surprises are where financial markets’ expectation and pricing of the Official Cash Rate immediately before an announcement is more than five basis points different from the actual announced rate.
Full research here: https://lnkd.in/dAGQ3hQu
Kia ora, I'm Rachael, a researcher
here at Te P��tea Matua.�� Our new analytical note
shows that monetary policy decisions that surprise financial markets
lead to changes in interest rates and the New Zealand dollar exchange
rate.���� Material monetary policy surprises
are where financial markets��� expectation and pricing of the Official Cash Rate - or
OCR - immediately before an announcement is more than five basis points
different from the actual announced rate.�� Material surprises are not common. Since 2006, less than one in every five
OCR announcements came as a material market surprise.��In this chart here you can see a number of surprises, as shown in the red dots above and below the line. For example, we can see this
during the global financial crisis here. We know that communication as a central bank helps monetary policy
to be more effective. So understanding the effects
of surprises on financial markets is important for us here
at the Reserve Bank. We found that an OCR surprise that was ten
basis points above expectations, would lead to a 0.5% rise
in the New Zealand Dollar exchange rate, in the first hour
after an OCR announcement.�� We also found evidence that OCR surprises
from Monetary Policy Statements have a slightly stronger
and more persistent effect on financial instruments than surprises
from Monetary Policy Reviews.�� This could be related
to the larger information set published during Monetary Policy Statements. To learn more, you can find the
full research on our website.
So....1 in 5 moves are a surprise.
What an odd thing to research...
Meaning 80% of the time, the market is pricing the correct course of RBNZ action.
Traders 4, economists 1?
Kelly ;) ;)
Former Managing Director Merrill Lynch Asia (2006-2008) Former Managing Director Morgan Stanley Co (1995-2006)
1moSo....1 in 5 moves are a surprise. What an odd thing to research... Meaning 80% of the time, the market is pricing the correct course of RBNZ action. Traders 4, economists 1? Kelly ;) ;)