TL;DR: The first assignment fixes which variable z refers to. The second assignment changes the value of that variable. The second call to declare is essentially a no-op; you've already set the nameref attribute on z; doing so a second time changes nothing.
The first time you use declare, z is uninitialized and undefined. The first assignment to z (whether in the call to declare or subsequent to it) determines which variable z refers to.
$ declare -n z
$ echo $z
$ z=somevalue
$ declare -p z
declare -n z=somevalue
echo $z at this point produces no value because somevalue itself is undefined.
Your second call to declare doesn't really do anything to z:
$ declare -n z
$ declare -p z
declare -n z=somevalue
It's still a reference to the variable somevalue. But now your second assignment to z does something different: it assigns a value to the variable somevalue, so that now when you do echo $z, you see the value of the variable somevalue, just as if you had written echo $somevalue.
It's a little less confusing if we use a different value for the two assignments, so we can distinguish between the referenced variable and its value.
$ declare -n z
$ z=foo
$ declare -p z
declare -n z=foo
$ z=9
$ echo $foo
9
bashscripting language.