Clearly dovish minutes

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Below find the complete RBA minutes from the recent meeting. Now we know what’s got them jumping and it looks like another win for MacroBusiness. Scroll to the final paragraph and you’ll find this key statement:

While there had been additional evidence of the coming strong pick-up in investment in the resources sector, activity remained quite subdued in some other important parts of the economy, partly reflecting the Board’s earlier actions as well as the appreciation of the exchange rate. Credit growth remained quite moderate and asset prices had softened. In addition, the global activity data had been somewhat softer and downside risks to the international economy had become a little more prominent over the past month, especially in the case of sovereign debt problems in Europe.

In other words, medium term Futureboom! intact but the risks associated with mutliple slowing sectors, especially the export sector and house prices, in conjunction with international worries, is outweighing that outlook. Interest rate markets rallied on the minutes with 3 year swaps down a few points from 5.06 to 5.01…an implied RBA move over 12 months from +3 to -3, a rate cut, which is probably noise at this point.

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International Economic Conditions

The expansion in the world economy was continuing, although some of the recent data were a little softer, especially in the case of the United States. Sovereign debt problems in Europe had also come to the fore again. However, growth in much of east Asia had remained strong. Inflationary pressures continued to be a concern in a number of regions, particularly in much of Asia.

Information on the Chinese economy had been mixed, with growth in industrial production appearing to have slowed but growth in investment and exports remaining robust. Construction activity had been strong, partly reflecting the Government’s policies to encourage supply of low-cost housing. Policy measures to slow demand, especially in property markets, appeared to have had some effect, with housing price inflation falling in recent months and credit growth moderating. However, consumer price inflation remained elevated. Although vegetable prices had fallen recently, higher commodity prices appeared to be feeding into second-round effects on inflation, and non-food inflation was at its highest rate in more than a decade. This was also contributing to an increase in Chinese export prices.

Japanese GDP contracted in the March quarter by nearly 1 per cent and there had been sharp falls in most of the economic indicators for the month of March, following the earthquake and tsunami. Abstracting from the motor vehicle sector, the monthly data for April had shown some signs of stabilisation in activity, and business surveys for May had indicated a recovery was under way. In contrast, production of cars had remained low in April and exports of cars had fallen significantly. Disruptions to supply chains had also resulted in significant falls in sales or production of cars in a range of other countries including the United States, United Kingdom and Thailand, as well as Australia. However, recent indications from the Japanese automotive producers were that production was likely to return to normal levels earlier than had initially been anticipated.

March quarter GDP growth remained strong in India and concern over inflation had prompted the central bank to raise its policy rate again. GDP growth was also strong in east Asia (excluding China and Japan), especially in the higher-income economies. Despite recent falls in food prices in a number of economies, inflationary pressures remained, amid limited spare capacity. Members observed that credit growth was high in most Asian economies and monetary policy stances remained relatively accommodative.

The recovery in the US economy had lost some momentum. Consumption growth had slowed, possibly reflecting the effect of the rise in fuel prices. The housing market was still very weak, with most of the various measures of nationwide prices around 30 per cent below their peak. In the labour market, the most recent payrolls figures had been disappointing. Business survey measures of activity had fallen from their earlier high levels, but were still at levels consistent with ongoing expansion.

Output in the euro area grew strongly in the March quarter, partly due to a recovery from the harsh weather in December. The north-south divide in economic performance in the euro area had continued, with growth strongest in Germany, France and the Netherlands. In contrast, economic conditions in the Italian and Spanish economies remained weak, and there had been a heightening in concerns over the sovereign debt problems in several economies. GDP in Greece had fallen by around 10 per cent from its peak in September 2008 and further declines were expected. Members observed that the economy had been weaker than initially envisaged under the May 2010 IMF/European Union program, and that additional budget measures and asset sales would be needed to meet the program targets for the budget deficit.

Commodity prices were mostly lower than at the time of the previous meeting, although they remained at high levels. There had been falls in the prices of oil, base metals and some rural commodities in early May amid a fall in global financial markets, but prices for most commodities had since recovered somewhat. Spot prices for bulk commodities had also softened a little, but contract prices for iron ore and coking coal were expected to remain at near-record levels in the September quarter.

Domestic Economic Conditions

GDP was estimated to have fallen by 1.2 per cent in the March quarter. The fall in coal and iron ore exports – which reflected weather-related disruptions – had subtracted 1¾ percentage points from GDP growth, with coal exports falling by 27 per cent in the quarter. In contrast to output, domestic final demand had grown solidly in the quarter. All the major components had increased, but growth was particularly strong in business investment.

The fall in mining production was expected to be temporary: indeed, iron ore exports were already back at normal levels, and the monthly data for coal exports showed a gradual recovery under way since February, although there was still some way to go before normal levels were regained. The rebound in mining production was expected to add significantly to GDP growth in the June and September quarters. The terms of trade had risen by nearly 6 per cent in the March quarter, and a further large increase to reach a new peak was expected in the June quarter, before a gradual decline over the medium term.

The past month had brought further evidence of the expected strength in mining investment. In the national accounts, the rise in business investment in the March quarter was driven by growth in machinery and equipment investment and engineering activity. According to firms’ investment plans in the capital expenditure survey, investment in the mining sector was expected to grow very strongly in 2011/12. Other indicators showed that the pipeline of approved or possible projects was at a very high level, although members noted that it was likely that capacity constraints would result in delays or cancellation of some of the projects in the earlier stages of planning.

Investment intentions outside the mining sector were considerably weaker, with the capital expenditure survey suggesting a significant downward revision to planned spending on buildings and structures in 2011/12. Non-residential building construction had fallen in the March quarter and there was little evidence of a pick-up in the near term, despite the gradual tightening in office vacancy rates. Residential building approvals were also at fairly low levels, notwithstanding a bounce in apartment approvals in the latest monthly data.

Households had continued to be cautious in their spending and borrowing behaviour. With household income growth strong in the March quarter and consumption increasing more moderately, the household saving ratio was estimated to have risen. Members observed that the saving ratio was now back to levels seen in the mid 1980s and that the increase from earlier unsustainably low levels was a positive development.

Retail sales data and liaison suggested continued moderate growth in spending in the first two months of the June quarter. Motor vehicle sales had fallen significantly in May, largely reflecting the problems in the global supply chain emanating from Japan. Notwithstanding above-average sentiment about the general outlook for the economy, surveys continued to suggest that households’ perceptions of their own personal finances over the coming year were well below average.

Consistent with ongoing consumer caution, the housing market had remained soft. Average dwelling prices had fallen modestly so far in 2011, with the weakness mostly in more expensive suburbs and in cities (notably Perth and Brisbane) that had seen a faster run-up in housing prices in earlier years. Housing credit growth had slowed and housing loan approvals had fallen in the first three months of the year, although preliminary numbers for April showed an increase.

The unemployment rate had been steady over recent months and around 1 percentage point below its peak in mid 2009. Employment was estimated to have fallen in April, following a large rise in March. Looking through this monthly volatility, however, the pace of employment growth appeared to have slowed from the rapid pace seen in late 2010.

The recent data for wages had indicated relatively firm growth, which – given poor aggregate productivity outcomes – implied a high rate of growth in unit labour costs. According to the wage price index, private-sector wages grew by 3.9 per cent over the year to the March quarter, which was above the average pace over the period since 1997, although not as high as the peak rates reached in 2008. Not surprisingly, wage growth had been strongest in Western Australia and in sectors exposed to the mining boom. In the 2011 Annual Wage Review, Fair Work Australia had announced an increase of 3.4 per cent to apply to all Federal awards from July. The decision was made in terms of a uniform percentage increase that would preserve wage relativities, as opposed to the fixed dollar increases for all awards in earlier years.

According to the Australian Government Budget for 2011/12, fiscal policy was expected to exert a significant contractionary impulse on aggregate demand over the next two years. The underlying cash balance was forecast to move from a deficit of 3.6 per cent of GDP in 2010/11 to a deficit of 1.5 per cent of GDP in 2011/12 and a small surplus in 2012/13. This forecast consolidation reflected both growth in tax revenue and a fall in expenditure as a share of GDP, resulting from a cap on spending growth and the wind-down of fiscal stimulus programs, as had been intended. State government budgets also pointed to some contractionary effects on the economy. These developments in fiscal policy were broadly in line with what had been assumed in the Bank’s forecasts for economic activity and inflation in the May Statement on Monetary Policy.

Financial Markets

Members discussed the sustainability of the Greek sovereign debt situation, noting that market concerns had intensified over the past month. The European Central Bank, European Commission and IMF had just completed their review of Greece’s compliance with the terms of the rescue package. Ahead of the announcement of that review, however, there had been extensive debate about whether the rescue package would achieve its goal of putting the Greek economy and its public debt position on a sustainable path. A financial assistance package totalling €78 billion had been endorsed by the European Union for Portugal over the past month.

Whereas in earlier months the debt problems of Greece, Ireland and Portugal had been largely reflected in the interest rates of those countries, over the past month they had spilled over to long-term rates for some other European countries.

Members noted that the renewed concerns about the euro area, together with somewhat weaker macroeconomic data, had seen government bond yields in the major economies fall further in recent weeks, to be around their lowest levels for the year. The 10-year government bond yields in both Germany and the United States had fallen to 3 per cent. Movements in Australian yields had mirrored those in the major markets with 10-year yields on government bonds falling to around 5¼ per cent.

Against that backdrop, global equity markets had also weakened over the month. Many markets were now back around their levels at the start of the year, while the Japanese market was more than 5 per cent lower. Resources stocks had declined following weaker commodity prices, while financials stocks had been weighed down by ongoing regulatory and legal challenges.

Members noted that volatility in foreign exchange markets had picked up over May along with the euro area concerns. The US dollar had appreciated, most notably against the euro but also against a number of emerging market currencies, such as the Brazilian real, that had previously appreciated strongly. The renminbi had moved up a little against the US dollar, resulting in a slightly larger increase against the currencies of its other trading partners. Having reached a new post-float high against the US dollar in early May, the Australian dollar had since depreciated.

Local credit markets had to date been broadly unaffected by these offshore developments. Issuance had been robust for banks and corporates as well as for asset-backed securities. The one-notch ratings downgrade by Moody’s of Australia’s four major banks had had no effect on banks’ bond spreads, mainly because the downgrade had been expected for some time.

Market expectations of monetary policy tightening in the major economies had been pushed back over the past month, in part reflecting more mixed economic data. In Australia, market expectations had shifted higher after the release of the May Statement on Monetary Policy, but subsequently fell back following softer domestic data.

Considerations for Monetary Policy

Members considered that the medium-term outlook for the economy was broadly as discussed at the May meeting. While inflation was currently in the bottom half of the target range in underlying terms, this had been partly due to the disinflationary effects of the appreciation of the exchange rate and the earlier moderation in labour costs. If the economy evolved in line with the staff forecasts, GDP growth would be somewhat above trend over the next few years, led by growth in the resources sector. A gradual pick-up in inflation could be expected under this scenario.

This outlook suggested that further tightening in monetary policy would be necessary at some point. Members considered, however, that the flow of data over the past month had not added any urgency to the need for an adjustment to policy. While there had been additional evidence of the coming strong pick-up in investment in the resources sector, activity remained quite subdued in some other important parts of the economy, partly reflecting the Board’s earlier actions as well as the appreciation of the exchange rate. Credit growth remained quite moderate and asset prices had softened. In addition, the global activity data had been somewhat softer and downside risks to the international economy had become a little more prominent over the past month, especially in the case of sovereign debt problems in Europe. Accordingly, members judged that it would be prudent to leave the stance of policy unchanged, pending further data on international developments and on the strength of domestic demand and inflationary pressures. They therefore considered that the current monetary policy setting was appropriate.

The Decision

The Board decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 4.75 per cent.

About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.