The Reserve Bank continues to be between a rock and a hard place, with inflation at near zero (0.1 per cent) and at least one bank predicting we will have a period of negative inflation this year (ouch).
That won't be a good look for Graeme Wheeler if it comes to pass - he is supposed to have inflation at around 2 per cent.
Economists at Westpac are forecasting inflation at below zero per cent come September and remaining below 1 per cent until 2017.
That must force Wheeler's hand to lower interest rates, and in turn should see floating mortgage rates drop to nearer 5.5 per cent.
Economists at Westpac say Wheeler may well cut the OCR on March 10, and the ASB's chief economist Nick Tuffley expects it will go down to 2 per cent this year (matching Australia).
And according to a national survey by ASB, a net 44 per cent of respondents expect house prices to increase over the next 12 months, down from the 52 per cent who expected price gains last quarter.
Fixed rates
The current crop of fixed interest mortgage rates are nowhere near as low as they could be.
The best deals this week are well above 4 per cent, but I think banks could offer rates in the 3s and still keep their shareholders happy.
Maybe they are helping to cool the market, but if I were looking to fix, I'd wait for something better (or drive a hard bargain).
Yes, the current deals are well below historic rates, but we don't live in that world anymore.
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