Showing posts with label reserve bank of australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reserve bank of australia. Show all posts

Jul 17, 2012

RBA Says Enough Is Enough





The Reserve Bank of Australia published the minutes of its July 3rd Monetary Policy Meeting (at which they left the overnight rate unchanged at 3.50% - which was market consensus at the time). After presenting various reasons that the economy is slowing but not catastrophically so, that inflation is contained and will probably continue to be for awhile, the RBA concludes that the previous cuts that have lowered the rate from 4.25 to 3.50 in the space of half a year should be enough to stimulate the economy in the near term.

Given all the uncertainties about China's response to their slowdown, the future path of the European crisis and the recent slowdown in the US, it does make sense to not shoot all of their bullets at once. 

Jun 19, 2012

AUD to Appreciate on Hawkish RBA, Resilient Economy


Before the June RBA meeting, the market was predicting even chances of a quarter and half point cuts. This was despite the fact that relatively speaking Australia's economy has been faring quite well despite the recent weakness in China. Well so much for that, as the minutes of RBA's monetary policy meeting showed today.

The Board considered whether the recent information warranted a further reduction in the cash rate. The arguments were finely balanced.
Cutting aggressively was apparently not even discussed. The question was whether to cut at all.


Apr 24, 2012

Australian Dollar's Double Jeopardy


This week it feels like the AUD was punished twice for what is essentially the same "crime". On Monday morning Asian time, the Producer Price Index (PPI) disappoints, coming out 0.6% lower than expected. The Australian dollar promptly sells off against the USD and JPY. This makes perfect sense - lower PPI generally feeds into lower inflation, thus an increased likelihood of a rate cut at the next RBA meeting. So far so good.

Overnight, SPX stabilizes and most "risk" currencies bounce a little in line with the equity market. On Tue morning Asian time, Australia's Consumer Price Index disappoints by a roughly equivalent amount. On this data release, the AUD drops again.

Apr 10, 2012

NAB Lowers Australia GDP Estimate. More Revisions to Follow?


It is starting to hit home that most sectors of Australia's economy are not benefiting from the riches generated by the export of natural resources to China. National Australia Bank, one of the big four banks in the country has lowered its GDP estimate for 2012, saying that

Despite a mining boom, the Australian economy has performed poorly in the first few months of 2012, and policy makers are expecting unemployment to rise in coming months

(See Australian Bank Cuts Growth Forecast For Economy).

The tentative decrease from 3.25% to 3% is quite modest and will most likely be followed by further

Mar 9, 2012

AUD Continues to Track Overall Risk Sentiment, Ignores Fundamentals


Over the past few days, all eyes have been on the Greek debt swap, with S&P futures quite volatile, swayed by rumours and expectations. At the same time Aud/Usd continues to trade in risk-on / risk-off mode, paying little heed to the economic reality. It underperformed slightly when GDP came out worse than expected on Wedn morning, but pretty much ignored worse employment data on Thu and an surprising trade deficit Fri morning. Overall things are not looking great at all, but the currency is

Feb 14, 2012

Sentiment on Australian Stocks is Slowly Turning Bearish


In relation to an earlier WhatIf post on the wisdom of RBA's decision not to cut rates, it was quite interesting to see Australian currency, policy may limit stock gains on Marketwatch. Higher rates are clearly a potential danger for Australia's economy. This had been pretty much ignored by the market and mainstream media, but it appears that the trend is changing. Also please refer to this WSJ article that came shortly after the rates announcement.

(For more WhatIf posts, click here)

Feb 10, 2012

Australia's Two Speed Economy


The Reserve Bank of Australia has released its quarterly statement on monetary policy and economic conditions. In it they note that the resource sector is indeed booming, as
it is likely that over the next year the level of business investment in the economy
will reach its highest level, relative to GDP, in at least half a century.
The report also goes on to say about the rest of the economy:

Feb 7, 2012

RBA Playing With Fire - Keeps Rate Unchanged


Today the Reserve Bank of Australia decided to keep the cash rate unchanged at 4.25%. Analyst consensus was for a quarter point cut. Also the OIS market was implying a ~75% chance of a cut. RBA's decision comes as a surprise, given the recent labor market weakness and drop in retail sales. Governor Stevens' statement reads a little bit like "everything is on track and on trend so why change anything?", but does recognize that
Year-ended CPI inflation will fall further over the next quarter or two. In underlying terms, inflation is around 2½ per cent. Over the coming one to two years, and abstracting from the effects of the carbon price, the Bank expects inflation to be in the 2–3 per cent range.
As inflation is unlikely to present a problem in the near future and given the challenges to global growth (and China in particular) a rate cut might have been a lot more prudent. As always time will tell.

Dec 20, 2011

Is the RBA Missing the Point?


Considering that China is now Australia's largest export market, I find it surprising that the RBA minutes only contain this small paragraph on the economic conditions there:
In China, most of the monthly indicators, including for industrial production and retail sales, were still consistent with solid GDP growth. However, conditions in the housing market were noticeably weaker than over the past couple of years, reflecting the effect of controls on buyers and tight credit supply for developers. Members noted that this slowing was in line with the authorities’ intentions.
RBA should be much more concerned about the situation in China - the unsustainable increase in local government debt and the political risk of the coming transition of power in 2012. The biggest challenge for the Australian government and the RBA should be finding ways to reduce its arguably overpriced currency and rebalance the economy away from reliance on the resource extraction sector. Given that "most firms ... expected wage pressures to remain contained" a more aggressive 50bps rate cut would have made more sense.