RBA set to delay interest rate cuts until Q2 2025

GENERAL NEWS

THE much-anticipated interest rate cuts may not come for a little while longer, with some now expecting the Reserve Bank of Australia to hold any cuts until the...

The RBA remains firm on its commitment to the current holding pattern for interest rates, referring to the tight labour market, with the unemployment rate steady for the...

At the same time, the underemployment rate and underutilisation rate have both dropped by around 0.5% from recent January peaks...

While it is the case that a lot of that slowdown reflects the impact of this year’s smaller minimum wage hike, there is no escaping the fact that wage pressures are easing across all...

While according to ANZ, the Wage Price index was up 0.8% quarter-on-quarter, with the six-month annualised pace of wages growth holding stable at 3.2%...

This, together with the unemployment rate having averaged 4.0% over the past year suggests full employment is likely consistent with an unemployment rate at or below 4%...

Indeed, if we consider lags between the unemployment rate and wages trends, the ‘natural rate’ of unemployment could be closer to 3¾%...

Capital Economics did note that if wage growth comes in below the RBA’s forecasts, the bank won’t need to cut back inflationary pressures by more than...

Adding that labour productivity is still only at 2016 levels and wage growth isn’t likely to alight with the RBA’s 2-3% target any time soon...

Moreover, given our assessment that the ongoing weakness in productivity is partly structural, we’re not particularly sanguine about prospects for a rebound...

Capital Economics is forecasting a greater downgrade in output per hour over the last quarter of the calendar year than the RBA, down 1.5% year-on-year compared to the bank’s...

The resulting persistence in unit labour cost growth is sure to give the Bank pause for thought, especially given that market services inflation has barely moderated...

While financial markets are pricing in a first cut for Q3, Capital Economics remains confident it will happen ahead of this due to weak demand making it tough to pass higher costs on...

With ANZ also noting “the risks of a later start to the easing cycle are rising”, despite still forecasting the RBA’s first cut for February 2025...

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