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By The Annual inflation rose 6.9% in the first quarter from 5.9% in the fourth quarter, the fastest since a 7.6% clip in the June quarter of 1990, Statistics New Zealand said in a statement on Thursday CPI rose 1.8% in the quarter ending March from a 1.4% rise in the fourth quarter. But the data was below economists' expectations in a Reuters poll that forecast a 2.0% rise for the quarter, and an annual rise of 7.1%. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) raised interest rates by a hefty 50 basis points to 1.50% last Wednesday, its fourth increase in a row. It has signalled that further hikes will be needed if it wants to get ahead of inflation. BROAD BASED PRICE RISES Inflation pressures were broad based with domestic price pressures continuing to intensify. Statistics "This domestic inflation is the kind that doesn't go away quickly," ANZ Bank economists said in a research note. "This continued rise in domestic inflation pressures only reinforces the need for ongoing interest rate rises by the RBNZ." ANZ believes higher interest rates will squeeze indebted households this year and engineering a soft landing for the overheated economy could be challenging, especially with the housing market already softening. The kiwi dollar eased 0.4% to With global inflation expected to stay elevated for some time, and prices of commodities and goods affected by supply issues, economists expect RBNZ to hike interest rates again. "Uncertainty is high but we could still see a 7% annual inflation print delivered in Q2 of this year," ASB Bank economists wrote in a note. It added the bigger issue for them was not when inflation would peak, but how persistent it was. (Editing by
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