Treasurer’s panic and disloyalty

Original article by Dennis Shanahan, Jack Quail
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 4-Sep-24

Former prime minister John Howard has criticised Treasurer Jim Chalmers for attempting to blame the Reserve Bank of Australia for the nation’s high interest rates. He contends that this has badly backfired, and RBA governor Michele Bullock does not deserve to be attacked in this way. Howard has also defended the performance of Bullock and the RBA’s board, arguing that they have had no alternative to raising the cash rate, due to factors such as the level of inflation and government spending. However, former RBA governor Bernie Fraser says the central bank has lost credibility and needs to reduce the cash rate sooner rather than later.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

‘Too far’: ALP frontbencher’s warning to Reserve Bank

Original article by Jack Quail
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 3-Sep-24

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says CPI data to be released on Wednesday will underline the impact of interest rate rises on the economy. Chalmers contends that he is "not taking a shot at anyone", although some observers have suggested that he is seeking to blame the Reserve Bank for the slowdown in the economy. Independent economist Saul Eslake says the fact that there has been only a small uptick in the unemployment rate refutes Chalmers’ claim that the Reserve Bank’s interest rate increases are "smashing the economy". Meanwhile, Assistant Immigration Minister Matt Thistlethwaite says the central bank must not go "too far" in seeking to combat inflation.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

RBA sticks to its guns: no rate cut before 2025

Original article by Joe Kelly
The Australian – Page: 4 : 21-Aug-24

The minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s two-day board meeting in eatly August show that it considered increasing the cash rate to 4.6 per cent. The minutes have also reinforced expectations that the central bank will not reduce the cash rate in 2024, with the board concluding that restoring inflation to the mid-point of its 2-3 per cent target range would be delayed until 2027 if official interest rates were cut to 4.1 per cent in the near-term.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

No rate cuts before Christmas

Original article by Michael Read
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 4 : 7-Aug-24

The Reserve Bank of Australia’s governor Michele Bullock says it gave "very serious consideration" to increasing the cash rate on Tuesday. However, the RBA’s board was of the view that the benefits of leaving official interest rates at 4.35 per cent outweighed the risk to the job market of an increase. Bullock emphasised that recent financial market volatility did not influence the monetary policy decision, contending that Monday’s sharemarket rout was an "overreaction" to one poor jobs report in the US. She also indicated that the RBA now expects interest rates to remain on hold until at least the end of 2024. Meanwhile, the RBA has advised that inflation is unlikely to return sustainably to its target range of 2-3 per cent before late 2026.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

Share rout heat on RBA

Original article by Sarah Jones, Joanne Tran, Jessica Sier
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 28 : 6-Aug-24

The global sharemarket downturn has coincided with the Reserve Bank of Australia’s two-day monetary policy meeting. Governor Michele Bullock will be among the first central bankers to publicly comment on the equities slump when she holds a press conference on Tuesday afternoon. Financial market traders now expect the RBA to reduce the cash rate in December, compared with previous expectations of February 2025. Meanwhile, there is speculation that the US Federal Reserve may be forced to intervene and reduce official interest rates before its next scheduled meeting in September.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, UNITED STATES. FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD

Traders gird for dangerous 48 hours

Original article by Sarah Jones
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 27 : 31-Jul-24

Bond market pricing suggests that there is about a 20 per cent chance that the Reserve Bank of Australia will increase the cash rate in August. The chances of a rate rise in September are now 31 per cent. Quarterly CPI data to be released on Wednesday is likely to be a key factor in the RBA’s monetary policy decision; the central bank’s preferred measure of trimmed mean inflation is tipped to ease from one per cent to 0.9 per cent. Investors will also be keenly awaiting the outcome of the US Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting, and signs that rate cuts are on its agenda in coming months.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, UNITED STATES. FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD

Treasurer on the defensive as RBA raises alarm over big-spending budgets

Original article by Patrick Commins
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 19-Jun-24

Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock says the central bank’s board is prepared to "do what is necessary" to restore inflation to its target range by mid-2025. The RBA’s decision on Tuesday to leave the cash rate unchanged at 4.35 per cent had been widely expected by economists. Bullock has indicated that the board had considered a rate rise, while a rate cut had not been on the agenda; she notes that the inflation figures for April were "a bit higher than expected". The RBA also expressed concern in its monetary policy statement that cost-of-living relief and other spending measures in federal and state budgets may fuel inflation. However, Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the government’s strategy is "the right one".

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY

Outlier economist predicts two rate rises this year

Original article by Matt Bell
The Australian – Page: 15 : 18-Jun-24

Economists at three of Australia’s four major banks are of the view that interest rates have peaked and the Reserve Bank of Australia will begin easing monetary policy in November. Other economists expect the first rate cut in 2025. However, Judo Bank’s economic adviser Warren Hogan expects the RBA to increase the cash rate in both August and November. He says the central bank’s board will be concerned about recent economic data such as higher-than-expected jobs growth in May, which suggests that inflation will remain above the target range. He adds that tax cuts and governments’ cost-of-living relief may add to inflation.

CORPORATES
JUDO BANK PTY LTD, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

Slowing economy puts RBA rate cut on cards: Minack

Original article by Jonathan Shapiro
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 25 : 13-Jun-24

Market strategist Gerard Minack says monetary policy in Australia is "very restrictive" at present, noting that official interest rates are still lower than comparable countries. Minack addressed the Morgan Stanley Australia summit on Wednesday, stating that he expects the Reserve Bank to reduce the cash rate later in 2024 or in early 2025. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley economist Chris Read said the central bank could increase the cash rate if inflation rises again. Market traders have fully priced in the cash rate remaining on hold until the end of 2024, and a rate cut in May 2025.

CORPORATES
MORGAN STANLEY AUSTRALIA LIMITED, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

RBA rate rise still likely even after wage review

Original article by Cecile Lefort
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 27 : 4-Jun-24

Su-Lin Ong from RBC Capital Markets says the Reserve Bank of Australia will most likely have welcomed the Fair Work Commission’s decision to limit the minimum wage increase to 3.75 per cent on Monday. Financial markets had been concerned that the minimum wage would be increased by at least four per cent, while economists had warned that a rise of this size would have complicated the RBA’s efforts to restore inflation to its target range. Bond traders have now priced in a 14 per cent chance of an interest rate rise by the end of 2024, while they have fully priced in a rate cut by August 2025.

CORPORATES
RBC CAPITAL MARKETS, AUSTRALIA. FAIR WORK COMMISSION, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA