Bill Evans sees RBA housing anxiety

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From Bill Evans:

As expected the Board of the Reserve Bank decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 1.50%.

We were most interested in how the Governor assessed the housing market in the light of strong auction clearance rates and some evidence of higher price growth in Sydney and Melbourne. Recall that the key assertion in the statement following the August cut was that “the likelihood of lower interest rates exacerbating risks in the housing market has diminished”. It is not surprising that this sentence was not repeated in the September statement. Arguably if we had not seen the evidence in the Sydney and Melbourne markets the Governor would have been sufficiently emboldened to repeat that assertion.

The other key theme around housing in the August statement was that “dwelling prices have been rising only moderately over the course of this year”. This statement repeats that assertion with an important qualification: “dwelling prices OVERALL have risen moderately over the past year”. That would appear to be recognition that the term “moderate” no longer applies to some parts of the country, specifically Sydney and Melbourne.

There have been some other subtle changes of language in this statement. In August, overall growth was described as continuing “at a moderate pace”. In this statement growth is described as: “overall growth is continuing”, arguably leaving out the word moderate indicates that he is not prepared to commit until tomorrow’s release of the GDP report. Equally, in August, areas of domestic demand were described as “expanding at a pace at or above trend”. In this statement areas of domestic demand are merely described as growing.

There is no change in the assessment of the key policy variables – inflation and employment. Inflation continues to be described as “quite low” and is expected to remain so for some time. Labour market indicators are still described as “somewhat mixed”.

The global outlook remains the same. The global economy is expected to grow at a lower than average pace and “China’s growth appears to be moderating”.

The final paragraph in the statement is a replica of the statement used in June following the May rate cut with a very clear neutral bias being signalled. While this is an accurate assessment of current thinking it seems highly unlikely that the outgoing Governor would have left the new Governor with any particular commitment. Better to allow total flexibility over the next few months.

Conclusion

Since the beginning of 2013 when interest rates had dropped to 3.00% the Bank has cut rates on six occasions and all of them have been in the months February, May, August and November. These dates are significant in that they coincide with an update on the inflation outlook and also the release of the Bank’s quarterly Statement on Monetary Policy when the Bank’s forecasts are reviewed. This means that the next possible time of a rate cut would be November this year.

We expect that rates will remain on hold in November. Our forecast for underlying inflation in the September quarter is 0.5% which, following a 0.5% for the June quarter, allays concerns that the Bank may have had( following the 0.2% print for the March quarter) that inflation was tumbling out of control.

We would also like to think that the new Governor might adopt a slightly wider target band (1-3%) when he reaches agreement with the Government on the new Inflation Target. A decision like that would take further pressure off a pursuit of a 2.50% inflation print given current global conditions. It would not be a good policy approach to pursue an unrealistic inflation target at the possible expense of destabilising asset markets and a further increase in in household debt ratios.

This expectation is not contingent on our forecast of steady rates in November given that we have to reluctantly recognise that a change in target is not likely.

Other factors that might prompt a rate cut in November would be a rampant AUD in response to further evidence that the Fed will remain on hold in December. However, whilst we think that decision by the Fed is unlikely we also expect that commodity prices will be weighing on the fair value of the AUD by that time.

Today’s statement really only provides a reasonable signal that the confidence around housing we saw in August has been shaken a little, slightly lowering the chances of that November cut.

Developments in the real economy will also be important. We expect tomorrow’s GDP report to print 0.5% for the quarter and 3.3% through the year. That will be the most up to date real sector information for the November meeting and of course represents around half a percent faster growth than the RBA’s current trend assessment.

While the Governor continues to describe labour market indicators as “somewhat mixed” our own research is more encouraging with employment growth likely to hold in the 1.5-2% range.

Overall we do not expect any change at the October meeting and are also anticipating steady rates in November.

Better clarify which housing index you follow and why, RBA.

And some others. George Tharenou from UBS:

Overall, there were only a few minor tweaks to the RBA’s post-meeting statement today. That said, we view it as coming in on the ‘positive’/’near-neutral’ side – and closer to the June statement as we expected – rather than on the ‘dovish’ side. Looking forward we still expect the RBA to hold rates steady.

Capital Economics’s Paul Dales:

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The policy statement released alongside the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decision to leave interest rates at 1.5% today provides no hint that another rate cut is around the corner. If the inflation data for the third quarter are very weak, the RBA’s hand may be forced in November. But it’s more likely that the next leg down in rates, to 1.0%, won’t come until next year.

It is interesting that the RBA continued to highlight that “dwellings prices overall have risen moderately over the past year” and that “considerable supply of apartments is scheduled to come on stream over the next couple of years” but that it dropped the phrase used in August that “the likelihood of lower interest rates exacerbating risks in the housing market has diminished”. This may suggest that it no longer needs to worry about the impact of further cuts on housing because it’s not intending to cut rates again!

JP Morgan’s Sally Auld:

The market appears more comfortable with the lack of an explicit easing bias, with AUD/USD and front end rates very subdued in the wake of the announcement.

We continue to believe that the RBA cash rate has not yet reached the trough for this cycle, and expect a further 50bp of easing in 1H17. But with Governor Stevens presiding over his last RBA Board meeting today, decisions on the future path of the RBA cash rate will now be guided by a new RBA hierarchy, with Governor Lowe and Deputy Governor Debelle taking charge in their respective roles from 18 September.

Citi economics:

The RBA is back in “chill out” mode. The Board is arguably ahead of the curve on policy, particularly against the performance of its GDP and CPI forecasts. We expect the RBA’s hibernation to last until November, by which time the market will have the Q3 CPI print and information on whether or not other major central banks have decided to loosen monetary and other unconventional policies further.

More to come prolly H1 next year.

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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.