RBA Minutes Surprise; Oil Soars To 6-Month High

 | May 17, 2016 07:05AM ET

Tuesday May 17: Five things the markets are talking about

The Fed is having a tough time getting its own message across; you know the one that U.S rate normalization has begun. The Fed believes that market participants are caught behind the curve; by under pricing future Fed rate hikes.

Later this morning, in this holiday shortened trading week, the market gets to chew on U.S inflation numbers. Perhaps today’s release may convince a few of the unconverted that when the Fed mentions a meeting is ‘live’ they may not just be paying lip service.

Today’s release is important. Currently, with the U.S core inflation print already above the Fed’s desired target of +2%, coupled with the Fed’s preferred measure (PCE) just shy (+1.6%), it will only take one or two more consistent inflation prints to convince the Fed to pull that rate trigger of theirs.

1. RBA minutes surprise markets

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) initiated a surprise rate earlier this month to a new record low (+1.75%) on the back of low inflation and slower global growth. However, the RBA meeting minutes released overnight indicate that the decision was a tight call, as members also considered waiting for more data before acting.

The less than ‘dovish’ report indicated that there has not been a material change in the outlook for Aussie economic activity or the unemployment rate, but the outlook for inflation had been revised lower.

The RBA was also “optimistic” that China policy support would address that economy’s slowdown.

The nest result surprised the Aussie asset bear’s. Yields backed up a tad (three-year bond yields rallied +3bps), while the AUD drifted away from this week’s lows (A$0.7360). The S&P/ASX managed to pare some of its early opening gains.