Free Trial

REPEAT: MNI SoP: RBA To Maintain Further Progress Narrative

MNI (London)
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 22:30 GMT Aug 5/18:30 EST Aug 5
By Sophia Rodrigues
     SYDNEY (MNI) - Despite some downside risks for both inflation and growth,
the Reserve Bank of Australia is likely to maintain its glass-half full approach
and the outlook for further progress in reducing unemployment and returning
inflation to the target mid-point.
     Following the board meeting Tuesday, the RBA is expected to leave the cash
rate unchanged at 1.5% -- the level prevailing since August 2016.
     Attention will be on the one-page statement, but the RBA is likely to
disappoint many expecting an acknowledgement of growing downside risks, instead
focusing on the positives. 
     The RBA's decision and guidance will be based on the quarterly Statement on
Monetary Policy, due Friday, when the key economic forecasts will be updated.
The RBA may make small changes to the forecasts, but overall describe it as
little-changed versus May. This will allow a continuation of the narrative that
the economy is expected to make gradual progress in reducing unemployment and
inflation, and therefore the next move in the cash rate is more likely to be up.
     The latter part is, however, expected only in the minutes and the SOMP, not
Tuesday's statement.
     --GDP STRENGTH
     The RBA's commentary on inflation is likely to be on the soft side, in line
with themes in the Q2 inflation data, but may maintain the central forecast for
a gradual pick-up as the economy strengthens.
     Since the last SOMP, Q1 GDP was released in early June, coming in above the
RBA's forecast, increasing its confidence that growth is likely to be above
trend in the next couple of years. Adding to the RBA's confidence are
expectations that the public sector will continue to contribute strongly to
growth. 
     The RBA recently pointed to the consolidated budget balance for the federal
and state governments that indicated slightly smaller cash deficits over the
coming two years than previously seen.
     The RBA may slightly downgrade the forecast for non-residential building
construction but offsetting that would be upgrade in machinery and equipment
investment. 
     --JOBS GROWTH
     More so than growth, the RBA's optimism is likely to center around the
labor market, based mainly on job vacancies, sitting at an historical high. The
RBA is also placing much weight on a combination of stronger labor market
conditions and growing skills shortages leading to a pick up in wage growth over
time.
     The RBA may also sound more positive about the outlook for household
consumption based on Q2 retail sales data. However, tempering this somewhat
would be weaker motor vehicle sales in recent months.
     On the housing market, the RBA may acknowledge falling nationwide prices.
While reiterating that lending standards by banks might tighten further, the RBA
may use the opportunity to point to competition in the mortgage market that's
leading to falls in interest rates and the recent easing in local money market
rates. Overall, the RBA is unlikely to show signs of concern over weakness in
the housing market.
     Those worries may be articulated in Friday's SOMP, where the RBA has the
opportunity to discuss risks to its forecasts. The main risk being an easing in
housing price growth having a disproportionate impact on households' spending
decisions, and thus on growth.
     --GLOBAL OUTLOOK
     The other important risk is that inflation could remain low for longer,
possibly moving lower. Any move lower would mean inflation is not making
progress towards the mid-point of the target band goal, and would thus require
an easing in monetary policy. Any description of such a risk would be in the
SOMP but the RBA's central scenario would continue to be for further gradual
progress.
     Then there are global risks, mainly from rising trade tensions and its
impact on China. Again, they will find some mention in the cash rate statement
but it is unclear if the RBA would quantify risks into forecasts.
--MNI Sydney Bureau; tel: +61 2-9716-5467; email: sophia.rodrigues@marketnews.com
--MNI London Bureau; tel: +44 203-586-2225; email: les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com

To read the full story

Close

Why MNI

MNI is the leading provider

of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.

Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.
}); window.REBELMOUSE_ACTIVE_TASKS_QUEUE.push(function(){ window.dataLayer.push({ 'event' : 'logedout', 'loggedOut' : 'loggedOut' }); });