RBNZ delivered a larger 50 bps rate cut, lowering the Official Cash Rate (OCR) to 2.50% at today’s meeting. The central bank maintained its easing bias, saying it “remains open to further reductions in the OCR” to ensure inflation returns sustainably to 2% over the medium term.
Minutes of the meeting showed the Monetary Policy Committee debated between a 25bps and 50bps move, with the majority favoring a bolder step to mitigate downside risks to medium-term growth and inflation. The Committee judged that prolonged spare capacity warranted a “clear signal” to support consumption and investment, helping anchor expectations amid a slowing economy.
While the Q2 GDP contraction was “considerably larger than expected,” the RBNZ attributed much of the weakness to temporary seasonal factors. It expects the distortion to reverse later in the year and said it does not see the short-term softness as materially altering the broader policy outlook.
The central bank noted that it had only marginally revised down its assessment of spare capacity but acknowledged “some downside risk” to activity. Inflation is projected to converge toward the 2% midpoint in the first half of next year, supported by easing tradables inflation and gradually moderating domestic cost pressures.













