Inside The Minds Of The RBA And The AUD/USD

 | May 20, 2016 12:37AM ET

Inside the Minds of the RBA:
Ex Reserve Bank of Australia governor Ian Macfarlane was in the Australian media overnight speaking about the direction global growth is headed and what effect that is having on monetary policy decisions at home.

It was his comments around on the Aussie dollar and why current governor Glenn Stevens and the RBA felt they ‘had to’ cut rates earlier this month that pricked my trading interest.

“Their problem is that financial markets, particularly offshore, assume a mechanical application of what they regard as the standard model.”

When the 2-3% target band was introduced, it wasn’t within a global environment of weak inflation and zero interest rates.

Neither were financial markets running the constant news cycle that we see now where even the smallest of central bank leaning can have monumental effects on where traders push markets.

“The inflation targeting approach says that if inflation forecasts are below target, we should run an easy monetary policy – we already have that. It doesn’t say that each time we receive an inflation statistic showing it is below target, we have to cut interest rates.”

But the fact is, that’s just how things are now and have to be taken into account. And Stevens knows this. The RBA are one of the more conservative central banks in the world and any decision to continue cutting rates wasn’t ever taken lightly (as the minutes showed).

But as we highlighted in our RBA Preview blog back in early May, the fact that the Aussie dollar would have rocketed to 80c would have been a HUGE concern for the RBA and Macfarlane is highlighting the issue of warning/pleasing markets over good policy.

It’s an excellent topic and hugely relevant to the way I try to encourage ‘trading market expectations’ and finding out where the greatest risk lies.

Check out the full AFR article that I tweeted earlier: