Monthly price data was mixed in May with food, power, accommodation and alcohol seeing a rise in inflation, while air travel, rents and petrol fell. The series released account for 46.5% of the quarterly CPI with Q2 due to be released on July 21, which the RBNZ expects to rise 0.5% q/q & 2.6% y/y. June monthly indices print earlier on July 17. RBNZ and NZIER compiled consensus accept a near-term pick up in inflation but continue to have it returning to the mid-point of the 1-3% target band.
NZ inflation y/y%

NZ inflation y/y%

Source: MNI - Market News/Statistics NZ
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Moody's has downgraded the US's long-term credit rating to Aa1 trom Aaa. The move may not have been fully expected today. But it was the last holdout among they S&P and Fitch to demote the USA from the top rating, and they placed negative outlook on the US last year (now stable). Fiscal deterioration, both past and anticipated as Congress wrangles with the Republican fiscal bill, is cited as the key factor. From the release (link):
The "extraordinary measures" available to Treasury to stave off a debt default were down to $82B as of May 14, per a Treasury Department release today.

There was mixed news on the housing and wholesale/manufacturing sales fronts this week, which on net look to slightly upwardly bias Q1 GDP estimates, pending next week's retail sales reading.
Housing starts blew through expectations at 278.6k in April (226.2k expected, 214.2k prior). This came after building permits fell a worse-than-expected 4.1% M/M in March as reported Wednesday.

On the sales front, March data was soft but positive versus expectations and could add a slight upward drift to Q1 GDP expectations.
