Headline: Rate Divergence Puts Wind Behind AUD/NZD
A widening monetary policy gap between Australia and New Zealand is strengthening the Australian dollar against the New Zealand dollar, as investors reassess interest rate paths and economic momentum across the Tasman.
Australia’s Reserve Bank left the cash rate at 3.60% last week, characterizing policy as mildly restrictive and near neutral. Stronger Q3 inflation and resilient domestic data have led markets to pare back expectations for further easing. Only about 9 basis points of cuts are priced for next year, signaling growing doubt that the RBA will reduce rates again in this cycle—a shift that underpins support for the AUD in currency markets.
In contrast, New Zealand’s central bank has already pivoted decisively toward looser policy. The RBNZ cut the Official Cash Rate by 50 basis points to 2.50% last month and kept the door open to additional reductions to bring inflation sustainably back to the 2% midpoint. That dovish stance has been reinforced by softer labor data, with Q3 unemployment rising to 5.3%, a new cyclical high. Markets are now entertaining the prospect of another sizable cut as soon as this month, with a small chance assigned to back-to-back 50bp moves. The resulting policy divergence continues to tilt momentum in favor of AUD/NZD.
Key Points: – RBA holds cash rate at 3.60%, describing policy as mildly restrictive and near neutral. – Stronger Q3 CPI and firm domestic data see markets pricing only ~9bps of RBA easing next year. – RBNZ cut the OCR by 50bps to 2.50% and remains open to further rate reductions. – New Zealand’s Q3 unemployment rose to 5.3%, reinforcing expectations for more easing. – Rate differentials and macro momentum favor the Australian dollar over the New Zealand dollar. – AUD/NZD gains reflect the widening policy divergence between the RBA and RBNZ.






