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RBA makes June cash rate call

In this special announcement, partnered by Legal Home Loans, learn the outcome of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s monthly board meeting.

user iconMaja Garaca Djurdjevic 01 June 2021 Big Law
RBA makes June cash rate call
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The Reserve Bank of Australia has made its last call on the official cash rate for the 2020-21 financial year.

As widely predicted, the RBA has held the cash rate at a record low 0.1 of a percentage point, despite the housing market continuing to boom with no constraints.

In a statement posted, RBA governor Philip Lowe said that the board has decided to maintain the current policy settings, including: the targets of 10 basis points for the cash rate and the yield on the 3-year Australian Government bond; the parameters of the government bond purchase program; and the rate of zero per cent on Exchange Settlement balances”.

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“The Board is committed to maintaining highly supportive monetary conditions to support a return to full employment in Australia and inflation consistent with the target. It will not increase the cash rate until actual inflation is sustainably within the 2 to 3 per cent target range. For this to occur, the labour market will need to be tight enough to generate wages growth that is materially higher than it is currently. This is unlikely to be until 2024 at the earliest.”

Once again, the decision to leave interest rates on hold failed to surprise economists, with the RBA repeatedly echoing its intentions to keep rates as they are until 2024 at the earliest.

Economists appear to also have come to terms with the bank’s apparent comfort with the red hot property prices.

In fact, CreditorWatch chief economist Harley Dale applauded the RBA’s decisions, noting that they’re clearly having the intended impacts given the “largely positive” economic recovery, despite even the latest setback in the form of the fourth Victorian lockdown.

“The synchronisation of expansionary fiscal policy and ultra-low interest rates are clearly paying dividends and the Reserve Bank of Australia appears quite comfortable with the current situation as the central bank holds fast on interest rates until the dynamics of Australia’s inflationary pressures change,” Mr Dale said.

However, Mr Dale did note that a decent inflationary pulse for the economy needs to be found, as well as that “ever-elusive evidence” of upward pressure on wages.

“It's just one month to go until the RBA’s $200 billion term funding facility for banks comes to an end and questions around whether the RBA will inject additional liquidity to complement the Federal Government’s expansionary fiscal policy,” Mr Dale said.

“H2 will be an important time for boosting business investment and ensuring Australia’s economic recovery remains durable.”

The RBA’s latest decision has also partially silenced chatter of sooner-than-expected rate growth, with AMP Capital’s Shane Oliver conceding on Tuesday that despite the faster than expected economic recovery, the RBA’s conditions for a rate hike are still far from being met”.

“The jobs market is still a long way from full employment, wages growth at 1.5 per cent is way below the 3 per cent plus pace necessary to sustain 2-3 per cent inflation and in any case inflation is still well below its target zone. So, a rate hike remains some time off,” Mr Oliver said.

However, some are still certain the RBA will be pushed to move in 2023.

The next move in interest rates is almost certain to be up, with the RBA likely to start tightening monetary policy by 2023,” said David Robertson of Bendigo Bank. 

“The current pace of economic recovery combined with fiscal and monetary stimulus may bring this forward to late 2022, but the RBA would prefer to wait for other central banks (e.g. NZ and Canada) to move first, before exiting ‘zero percent interest rates’.”

In the meantime, some of the big four are almost certain that macroprudential measures will be enacted to slow the speed of property price growth.

In fact, Westpac hinted in its latest housing pulse report that the RBA could act in the first half of 2022, following the latter’s announcement in May that confirmed it would be “watching closely” as housing borrowing balloons.

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