Banking

Australia’s central bank, no longer ‘patient’, opens door to tightening

Australia’s central bank on Tuesday opened the door to the first interest rate increase in more than a decade as it dropped a previous pledge to be “patient” on policy, a major surprise that sent the local dollar to nine-month highs.

Wrapping up its April policy meeting, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) kept its cash rate at 0.1% but noted inflation had picked up and was likely to rise further, while unemployment had fallen faster than expected to 4.0%.

“Over coming months, important additional evidence will be available to the Board on both inflation and the evolution of labour costs,” said RBA Governor Philip Lowe in a statement.

“The Board will assess this and other incoming information as its sets policy,” he added, omitting any reference made in previous statements to the Board being patient.

Markets took the change as a step toward an eventual tightening and sent the local dollar up 0.9% to a nine-month high.

Previously, Lowe had said that it was plausible a first hike would come later this year, while markets have long wagered on an earlier move given how inflation has taken off.

Data for consumer prices is due on April 27 and analysts suspect it could show core inflation jumped by 1.0% or more in the first quarter to take the annual pace to at least 3.2%.

That would be the first time core inflation topped the RBA’s 2-3% target band since early 2010 and make it harder to justify retaining rates at emergency lows.

“The retirement of the ‘patience’ mantra and is an acknowledgement that like the rest of the developed country complex, inflation in Australia has and will surprise with its magnitude and momentum,” said GSFM investment strategist Stephen Miller.

“The RBA wishes to avoid meeting an inflation target by causing a recession, or allowing high and potentially destabilising inflation to persist well into 2023.”

Markets have long been priced for a June rate rise to 0.25% , and imply no less than six more hikes to 1.75% by year end. Yields on three-year bonds rose 6 basis points on Tuesday to 2.46% , having already surged 87 basis points in March.

That aggressive outlook in part reflects expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will hike by 50 basis points in both May and June, adding to pressure for other central banks to follow.

Any RBA rise would be a shock for local borrowers given they have not seen an official increase since 2010 and households are sitting on record levels of mortgage debt.

Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Sam Holmes

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Gulf States suffer the loss of Dh550 billion in energy income due to the regional war

According to Majid Jafar, CEO of Crescent Petroleum Company, the Middle East military dispute is…

22 hours ago

More than 3,200 new Dubai homebuyers emerge within one year

The project kicked off operations in July 2025 and has already witnessed residential real estate…

2 days ago

Remraam tenants in Dubai were provided with compensation due to temporary eviction

Residents in the Remraam area of Dubai have received offers of rent reimbursement and resettlement…

3 days ago

PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026

PROFX MEDIA ANNOUNCES PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026 IN CAPE  TOWN, UNITING GLOBAL FOREX & FINTECH…

4 days ago

PROFIN EXPO BANGKOK 2026

PROFX MEDIA TO HOST PROFINEXPO BANGKOK 2026, A GLOBAL  GATHERING OF FINTECH, BANKING & INVESTMENT…

4 days ago

Abu Dhabi rent freeze: The implications of this ‘very rare’ policy on you

The Tawtheeq system will not allow registration of contracts at rates higher than those of…

4 days ago