Australia to Hold Rates Steady This Week Amid Triple Pressure, Ending 2023's Consecutive Hiking Cycle

Stock News06-15 08:04

Australia is anticipated to keep its key interest rate unchanged for the first time this year. As the economy shows signs of weakness, market bets on further rate hikes are receding. Economists expect the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to hold the cash rate at 4.35%, marking an end to the consecutive rate increases seen in its last three meetings of 2023. The market focus will be on whether Governor Michele Bullock expresses comfort with the current level of rates or leaves the door open for future hikes to combat persistent price pressures. Governor Bullock will hold a press conference in Sydney at 3:30 p.m. local time, one hour after the rate decision announcement on Tuesday.

Australian households and the broader economy continue to face a triple squeeze from resurgent inflation, the RBA's rapid rate hikes, and surging fuel costs linked to the war in Iran. These factors are starting to show up in the data—weak growth, rising unemployment, and a slight easing of inflation pressures. Prashant Newnaha, Chief Asia-Pacific Macro Strategist at TD Securities in Singapore, stated that if Bullock signals any prolonged pause on the cash rate, investors would interpret it as a "dovish tilt, and that's the risk." He worries investors might over-interpret such guidance. "We doubt the RBA's models are signaling an imminent recession, and with trimmed mean inflation set to stay high for a while, any talk of rate cuts is premature."

Global Context for the Rate Decision

Australia's rate decision comes as several other major central banks are also expected to hold steady this week. The U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the Swiss National Bank are widely anticipated to keep rates on hold, while further tightening by the Bank of Japan is largely priced in by markets. The European Central Bank delivered its first rate cut in nearly three years last week, with President Christine Lagarde warning that war-induced inflation is spreading beyond the energy sector.

Shifting Forecasts and Market Pricing

Australia's rate outlook shifted somewhat last week. Sally Auld of JPMorgan Chase & Co. withdrew her forecast for another RBA rate hike, citing increasing signs of slowing economic momentum. Her view is supported by developments overseas: oil prices fell to a two-month low on signals that the U.S.-Iran war could potentially end. Money markets adjusted: early last week, traders had fully priced in another RBA hike by December, but by the weekend, that probability had fallen to just 60%.

Recent Economic Data and RBA's Outlook

Since the RBA's May meeting, Australia's unemployment rate has unexpectedly risen to a four-and-a-half-year high, household spending has declined, and economic growth was slightly weaker than expected. Meanwhile, although inflation remains above the top of the RBA's 2-3% target band, recent data suggests its momentum is not as strong as previously feared. Governor Bullock said earlier this month in a parliamentary hearing that the central bank was seeing some signs that higher rates were transmitting to the real economy, with an initial slowdown in the housing market. However, she expressed concern about the risk of second-round inflation effects from the energy shock caused by the war in Iran. The RBA forecasts that economic growth will slow significantly over its forecast horizon (to mid-2028), by which time headline and underlying inflation are expected to return to the midpoint of its 2.5% target.

Diverging Views Among Economists

Despite this, some economists believe the tightening cycle is not over. Josh Williamson of Citigroup Inc. expects the RBA to pause this month, but he believes the decision could carry a "hawkish tilt" due to uncertainty around the inflation outlook, and he continues to forecast a 25 basis point hike in August. He stated, "While recent data provides room for a temporary pause, the risks of a domestic wage-price spiral and second-round effects from the Middle East conflict suggest policy is not yet sufficiently restrictive."

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