RBA to hold rates at 3.85% in June, but may raise again soon

Reuters

Published Jun 01, 2023 08:10PM ET

Updated Jun 02, 2023 03:35AM ET

By Devayani Sathyan

BENGALURU (Reuters) - Australia's central bank will keep its key interest rate unchanged at 3.85% on Tuesday despite inflation well above the target range, according to a Reuters poll of economists who were divided on when and where rates would peak this year.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised rates last month after pausing in April, confounding financial markets and a majority of economists who were expecting the central bank to hold.

So far there has been little evidence inflation will fall to the RBA's target range of between 2% and 3% anytime soon and RBA Governor Philip Lowe said in a recent appearance before lawmakers "we've got work to do there."

But while expectations for future rate hikes were very much alive, nearly a two-thirds majority of economists, or 21 of 32, forecast the RBA would hold its official cash rate at 3.85% on June 6.

Of the major local banks - CBA, NAB and Westpac - expect a pause on Tuesday.

ANZ expected a hike by 25 basis points as did the 10 other

respondents in the May 29-June 2 poll who forecast a rate hike. Interest rate futures were pricing in a roughly one-in-three chance of a rate hike on June 6.

TARGET RANGE

"We expect a pause in June because the RBA has slowed down the cadence of rate hikes. And having gone in May after pausing in April, we are not sure the data makes the case for them to go as soon as June, even as we do still expect (one) more hike," said Taylor Nugent, economist at NAB.

"The level of interest rates is still not sufficiently restrictive for the RBA to be comfortable inflation will get back to target in time," Nugent added. "We think the RBA will move again by August."

Inflation has stayed at or above the central bank's upper target range since June 2021.

The latest monthly data showed annual price rises in April accelerated to 6.8% from 6.3% in March. On a quarterly basis, inflation was last reported at 7.0%, with the next set of data due in July.

While many say rates will still need to rise, there was no clear consensus about where the cash rate would be by the end of the third quarter, a split that has persisted from a poll conducted last month.

Some analysts have referred to a stop-start approach from the central bank in recent months as leading to confusion over how much higher rates will need to go, if at all.

Nearly 70% of respondents, or 20 of 29, expected rates to reach 4.10% or higher by end-September, including six who saw rates at 4.35%. The remaining nine expected rates to stay at 3.85%.

"If the inflation data comes in stronger than the RBA's forecasts, then they will likely deliver on that hiking bias. So there's a clear risk over the next two or three meetings that they hike (the) cash rate," said Gareth Aird, head of Australian Economics at CBA.

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