Lead
New Zealand's macro trajectory has entered a phase of stalled momentum where an anaemic GDP profile is tightly linked to a still-subdued housing market. Official statistics for Q4 2025 show GDP growth effectively flat at 0.1% quarter-on-quarter (Stats NZ, Dec 2025), while the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand (REINZ) reports national house prices remain roughly 15% below their 2022 peak (REINZ, Feb 2026). The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) holds the Official Cash Rate at 5.5% as of March 2026, a policy stance originally designed to crush inflation but which has restrained mortgage demand and construction (RBNZ, Mar 2026). Net migration flows, which surged in 2022–24 and temporarily supported domestic demand, slowed to an annual net inflow of approximately 95,000 in 2025, down from the 2023 high of ~135,000 (Stats NZ, Jan 2026). These dynamics — weak housing, tighter policy, and moderating migration — frame why GDP has struggled to regain pre-pandemic momentum and why the recovery narrative is now conditional on a housing reset.
Context
New Zealand’s economic performance since the pandemic has diverged from prior recoveries because housing has not acted as the demand engine it historically has been. Housing accounted for an outsized share of wealth and domestic collateral during the 2010s, and price appreciation powered consumer spending and construction. The reversal beginning in 2022 — when prices peaked and then fell by about 15% through early 2026 (REINZ, Feb 2026) — removed a key channel for household balance-sheet repair via refinancing and equity withdrawal. That absence matters: Stats NZ estimates that residential investment and household consumption together contributed less than 0.5 percentage points to annual GDP growth in 2025, a material decline from the 1.5–2.0 percentage point contributions seen in 2017–19 (Stats NZ, Dec 2025).
Monetary policy evolution is central to this context. The RBNZ raised the OCR aggressively in 2022–23 to a peak that has persisted around 5.5% as of March 2026, intending to re-anchor inflation expectations and reduce demand (RBNZ, Mar 2026). Those hikes have filtered into mortgage rates: average variable mortgage rates rose from c.2.5% in 2021 to above 6.0% for new retail lending in 2024–25 (Banking Association of New Zealand, Nov 2025). The policy tightening did reduce inflation — headline CPI fell from a 2022 peak of over 7% to around 3.9% by September 2025 (Stats NZ, Sep 2025) — but it also dampened activity in interest-rate-sensitive sectors, principally housing and construction.
External conditions offer a mixed backdrop. New Zealand’s export sector benefited modestly from commodity price resilience in 2024–25, with dairy export values up roughly 8% year-on-year in 2025 (Ministry for Primary Industries, Dec 2025). Yet, the benefits were insufficient to offset the domestic demand shortfall. Compared with Australia, New Zealand’s GDP growth in 2025 — near 0.4% annualised — lagged Australia’s ~1.8% growth (ABS, Dec 2025), widening perceived relative underperformance and pressuring the NZD versus the AUD throughout late 2025 and early 2026.
Data Deep Dive
Q4 2025 growth printed at 0.1% q/q, equivalent to approximately 0.4% annualised and leaving annual GDP growth for 2025 near 0.6% (Stats NZ, Dec 2025). The components reveal a pronounced domestic weakness: household final consumption expenditure slowed to 0.2% q/q in Q4, while gross fixed capital formation contracted by 0.3% q/q as non-residential construction and machinery investment lost steam. Residential investment has been the weakest link, with dwelling investment down an estimated 6% year-on-year for 2025 (Stats NZ, Dec 2025), reflecting both reduced building starts and stalled transactions.
Housing market metrics illustrate the transmission mechanism. REINZ data show median house prices ~15% below the 2022 peak as of Feb 2026, transaction volumes remain roughly 30% below the 2019–20 average, and new consent issuance has fallen by about 20% since mid-2023 (REINZ, Feb 2026; MBIE building consents, Nov 2025). The contraction in the turnover of existing homes compresses the contribution of housing services to GDP and reduces the flow of renovation and refurbishment activity. Mortgage serviceability tests tightened; banks increased loan-to-value sensitivity in 2024–25, and the share of interest-only or low-documentation lending fell materially (Banking Association of New Zealand, Nov 2025).
Labour market data show resilience but signs of cooling. Unemployment held near 4.1% in December 2025, up from a pandemic-era low of 3.2% in 2022 (Stats NZ, Dec 2025). Wage growth moderated to around 3.8% year-on-year in the latter half of 2025 (MBIE, Nov 2025), below the 4.5–5.0% bands that were adding upward pressure to services inflation in 2022–23. Participation rates remain elevated compared with pre-pandemic levels, which has contained headline unemployment, but underemployment and hours worked suggest slack is slowly increasing — an indicator that employment resilience may not be sufficient to drive solid consumption growth without a housing-led wealth effect.
Sector Implications
Residential construction and the broader property-services value chain are the most directly impaired sectors. Reduced starts and transaction volumes have fed into lower demand for materials, architectural and brokerage services, and mortgage origination. Builders’ sentiment indices show order books that are 20–25% thinner than the 2019 average, and several mid-sized construction firms reported revenue declines in FY2025 (Industry surveys, Oct–Nov 2025). The ripple extends to local government revenue: lower stamp duty equivalents and subdued development contributions constrain municipal capital spending on infrastructure, which historically has been correlated with building activity.
Financial institutions and non-bank lenders are also affected. Banks have seen a shift in mortgage book profiles: slower new lending growth, higher cost of funding as the OCR remained elevated, and greater provisioning for longer-tail credit risks in certain regional markets. That said, non-performing loans remained controlled at below 1.0% of total household credit as of Q4 2025 (RBNZ, Dec 2025), reflecting the short lag between housing price falls and solvency stress in a high-employment context. For investors and corporates, the subdued backdrop implies a longer timeline for cyclical recovery and a preference for credit structures that price duration and regional exposure explicitly.
Exports and tourism offer partial offsets but with constraints. Dairy and primary exports delivered modest revenue gains (dairy export values +8% YoY in 2025, Ministry for Primary Industries, Dec 2025), but these are insufficient to offset the drag from domestic demand. Tourism recovery has progressed, with visitor arrivals at ~85% of 2019 levels by late 2025 (MBIE, Nov 2025), but the sector’s capital intensity and seasonality mean it cannot substitute for broad-based domestic demand lost through housing.
Risk Assessment
Downside risks center on a prolonged housing stagnation and policy miscalibration. If house prices continue to languish near current levels — for example, another 5–10% downward adjustment concentrated in regional markets — consumer confidence and residential construction could further retract, pushing GDP toward stagnation or shallow contraction in 2026. The RBNZ faces a policy trade-off: premature easing risks lifting inflation again toward the 3–4% band, while delayed easing risks deeper domestic weakness. Market pricing in early 2026 assigned only a modest probability to OCR cuts within 12 months, implying a policy stance that may remain restrictive relative to the cyclical needs of the housing sector (Swap and futures markets, Feb 2026).
External shocks, such as weaker demand from China or a sharper-than-expected global downturn, would amplify risks. New Zealand’s export basket is concentrated in agricultural commodities whose prices are volatile: a 10% fall in dairy prices would shave roughly 0.3–0.5 percentage points from GDP growth in a year, all else equal (MPI sensitivity analysis, Dec 2025). Conversely, a more favorable international environment with stronger commodity prices and tourism could materially improve the outlook — a reminder of the country’s partial reliance on external demand to offset domestic weakness.
Political and regulatory risks matter for housing-specific outcomes. Proposals to change tax treatment of property, increase supply-side interventions, or alter planning and consenting processes could have long lags and uncertain effects on activity. For institutional investors and policy makers, the calibration of supply incentives (fast-tracking consents, infrastructure support) versus demand-side measures (credit easing, mortgage relief) will be a critical determinant of recovery timing and distributional outcomes.
Fazen Capital Perspective
From a contrarian macro vantage, the inertia in New Zealand’s housing market creates selective opportunities for long-duration, structural investors who can distinguish between cyclical and secular weak spots. Housing weakness is uneven: Auckland and some high-infrastructure regional corridors show earlier signs of base-building in sales volumes, whereas peripheral regions face deeper inventory and affordability constraints. We assess that a measured easing of monetary policy — contingent on inflation remaining below 4% and wage growth steadying near 3.5%–4.0% — could catalyse a staged recovery in credit demand; however, the timing and transmission to transaction activity will be slower than in prior cycles due to tighter lender prudential standards implemented post-2023. Institutional capital that targets rental yield improvements, refinancing credit lines for mid-market developers, or selective exposure to export-oriented rural assets may capture asymmetric returns if a gradual housing rebound occurs. For more on structural opportunities and sector-specific research, see our insights on [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and regional housing strategy at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
Baseline scenario: GDP growth remains subdued through 2026 with full-year growth of 0.5–1.0%, dependent on a partial housing stabilisation by mid-2026 and continued resilience in exports. The RBNZ is likely to keep the OCR at restrictive levels into 2026 H1, with market pricing implying a first cut only if inflation falls sustainably below 3.5% and labour-market slack widens materially (RBNZ projections, Mar 2026). A downside scenario — a further 5–10% house-price decline combined with a sharper global slowdown — could tip growth into contraction and force more aggressive policy responses, while an upside scenario featuring stronger commodity prices and faster migration could lift growth to 1.5–2.0% in 2026.
Policy levers that would materially change the outlook include: (1) targeted supply-side measures that accelerate consenting and infrastructure delivery, (2) calibrated micro-prudential adjustments to revive credit flow to construction without reigniting leverage excess, and (3) fiscal support for low-income housing demand that translates into tangible construction pipelines. Each lever has trade-offs and lagged effects; investors should price in a multi-quarter horizon for any meaningful macro improvement to surface. For detailed modelling and scenario analyses, our institutional research provides stress-tested assumptions and regional breakdowns that can be accessed via our institutional portal [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
New Zealand’s recovery hinges on a housing market that has yet to provide the consumption and construction lift historically associated with rebounds; with Q4 2025 GDP near flat and house prices ~15% below peak, policymakers face constrained options. Expect a slow, uneven recovery contingent on policy easing timelines and global commodity outcomes.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: How quickly would an RBNZ rate cut affect the housing market? A: Historical transmission suggests 6–12 months before cuts materially lift transaction volumes and starts; however, post-2023 prudential changes have lengthened this lag. If the OCR were cut by 50bp, banks would likely pass through 30–40bp to mortgage rates initially, with full pass-through over a year depending on funding costs and competition.
Q: Has New Zealand historically recovered without a housing rebound? A: Past recoveries (1990s, mid-2000s) typically involved housing-driven expansions; the current episode is atypical because of higher baseline interest rates and tighter lending standards — meaning growth could normalise via exports and fiscal stimulus rather than housing alone.
Q: What regions are most insulated from the housing slump? A: Export-oriented rural regions and tech-heavy urban clusters with strong employment fundamentals (parts of Wellington and Christchurch) show comparatively smaller price declines and faster transaction turnover, offering relatively lower cyclical downside.
