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Why The RBA May Not Cut Interest Rates

Published 05/06/2019, 04:32 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Daily FX Market Roundup May 6, 2019

Kathy Lien, Managing Director Of FX Strategy For BK Asset Management

On the eve before the Reserve Bank of Australia’s monetary policy announcement, the Australian dollar dropped to fresh 4-month lows. President Trump’s threat of tariffs on China triggered Monday’s sell-off but the consensus forecast is for a rate cut this month. We are surprised by this dovish outlook and investors share our view as the market is pricing in a less than 50% chance of a rate cut. They believe that easing will be necessary this year but not until August or later. The idea of a rate cut was sparked by a small tweak in the last monetary policy statement that suggested the Reserve Bank no longer believes that a rate hike is more likely than a cut. In April, they said “The Board will continue to monitor developments and set monetary policy to support sustainable growth in the economy and achieve the inflation target over time,” which suggested that they are moving to a more dovish posture. The Australian dollar plunged in response.

However we think it is premature to bank on a rate cut from the RBA. Since the last monetary policy meeting, there’s been broad-based improvement in Australia’s economy as shown in the table below. Retail sales are up, manufacturing, service and construction sector activity improved and job growth accelerated. We’ll get the latest trade and spending numbers right before RBA but the risk is to the upside given the improvements in manufacturing PMI and the sales component of PSI. Inflation is much lower but other central banks dealing with the same conditions view the downtick in prices as temporary. Based on the latest economic reports the RBA has no reason to appear more or less dovish. Yet with the deterioration rather than improvement in trade tensions between the U.S. and China, the RBA has a lot to worry about. Considering President Trump’s history of walking backs threats, it would be smarter for the RBA to wait for the tariffs to become official before resorting to a rate cut. If Trump’s threat is effective in accelerating a trade deal, a rate cut may not be necessary.

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So if the RBA leaves interest rates unchanged, AUD/USD could squeeze higher on short covering – though the lasting response will be based on whether they talk easing. If they confirm that a rate cut would be possible this year, we could still see the pair end the day lower. But if they leave interest rates and most of their monetary policy statement unchanged, disappointed bears could square up, driving the Australian dollar higher.

AUD Data Points

Latest comments

Australia is just a UK depencance , so an EU depandance. 1€ will join 2.25-2.5AAUD.The huge housing bubble in Australia will explode like in HK ,London, US and other places.
Excellent prediction ....Well done Kathy...
Very prescient indeed Ms. Lien, kudos.
kathy does seem to be frequently wrong though her analysis is usually spot on. just shows how difficult it can be to predict the markets. i think she makes a good point here though. the fact that rates in australia are at historic lows right now suggests that the RBA is not on board with the currently trendy 0% or lower rates. it makes sense given the improvement in data that they wont see the need to drive rates even lower. china (australias main trading partner) also seems to be doing at least OK now if not better. even if AUD dips i think it will be short lived.
not to mention that aud/usd is near 10 year lows. barring some global disaster its hard to see aud dropping too much lower. check out the down trend that has been in place since jan 18. it has definitely flattened out over the last few months.
i mean jan 2018.
Aud is ripe for a buy.... I'm gonna buy audusd
consider buying aud/jpy instead. it may be a little riskier (its more volatile) but if you are going to hold for more than a week you'll be paying money in interest to hold aud/usd whereas you'll earn money in interest if you hold aud/jpy .... i'm gonna buy some aud/jpy if i can pick some up around 77 or lower.
lol
If and if and if...
To much ifs leave uncertainty
Considering RBA gets inflation reports only quarterly, do you think that might push them to front load the cuts now than wait
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