Australia’s central bank holds rate

A customer withdraws fifty-dollar Australian bank notes from an automated teller machine (ATM) in Sydney, Australia, on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011. Australia's central bank may need to resume increasing the developed world's highest borrowing costs to keep inflation from accelerating as a mining boom intensifies, according to the International Monetary Fund. Photographer: Sergio Dionisio/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Bloomberg

Australia’s central bank kept interest rates unchanged and warned a rising currency is expected to subdue inflation and weigh on the outlook for growth and employment.
The Australian dollar has surged more than 11 percent this year, hampering the Reserve Bank’s efforts to transition the economy to growth led by exports like education and tourism. That prompted Governor Philip Lowe to end 16 months of gentle cautioning that a rising exchange rate could merely “complicate” the handover.
“The higher exchange rate is expected to contribute to subdued price pressures in the economy,” Lowe said in his statement, the longest since 2013. “It is also weighing on the outlook for output and employment. An appreciating exchange rate would be expected to result in a slower pick-up in economic activity and inflation than currently forecast.”
The Australian dollar bought 80.14 US cents at 4:47 p.m. in Sydney, little changed from 80.19 cents before the statement detailing the board’s decision to hold the cash rate at 1.5 percent. Traders are pricing in a 50 percent chance of a rate increase in July.
“The bank would be particularly concerned if the Australian dollar remains stubbornly high, should the terms of trade decline as the bank is currently expecting,” said Paul Brennan, chief economist for Australia at Citigroup Inc.
Lowe and his deputy, Guy Debelle, began to ramp up their rhetoric on the Australian dollar last month and have elevated the negative impact of its strength. Still, policy makers showed renewed confidence in the labour market — following the biggest two-month full-time job gains in almost 30 years — predicting that the jobless rate would “decline a little” over the next couple of years from the current 5.6 percent.
“The commentary around the labour market is still somewhat cautious despite consistently strong employment numbers,” said Bill Evans, chief economist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney. “That is because concerns around wages growth remain, with the damaging feedback loop from low wages growth to weak consumption and business investment being of paramount concern.”
The RBA reiterated that wage growth remains low and will likely be so for some time yet. That, together with new entrants in the retail industry are likely to keep inflation subdued, notwithstanding sharp electricity price increases.
The RBA has kept rates unchanged for a year and refrained from joining global counterparts in signaling plans to withdraw stimulus amid concern about weak wages and tepid inflation. Its easing cycle was designed to cushion a transition away from mining to services and manufacturing, encouraging firms to hire and invest.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend