The factors that could impact the chances of a February rate cut

Two final data readouts could prove pivotal to the Reserve Bank's next decision on interest rates after shock unemployment figures.

Rooftops of houses flanked by tall trees.

Unexpected drop in unemployment lowers RBA rate cut expectations. Source: AAP / James Ross

Most economists have written off a February interest rate cut, but there remain two crucial data releases that could convince the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) otherwise.

A drastically stronger than predicted Australian Bureau of Statistics labour market report on Thursday caused economists and bonds traders to scale back their expectations.

Softer economic growth figures and a on Tuesday had raised hopes of a February rate cut.
That was offset by the unexpected drop in unemployment to 3.9 per cent, said ANZ senior economist Adelaide Timbrell.

ANZ, along with Westpac and NAB, predicts the RBA will start its monetary easing cycle in May, given the central bank's concerns inflation remains too high and unemployment too low.

But the 'big four' outlier Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) still holds hope for a February cut.

Despite conceding the labour market data weakened the case for a cut, CBA head of Australian economics Gareth Aird believes the remaining inflation and labour market prints before the RBA's next meeting could have the bank leaning towards a cut.

It will almost certainly require trimmed mean inflation — released on 29 January — to come in below 0.6 per cent for the December quarter, Aird said, a significant reduction from the 0.8 per cent figure in the September quarter.

The trimmed mean provides a view of underlying inflation by reducing the effect of irregular or temporary price changes that can impact inflation.
Exterior of the Reserve Bank of Australia building.
Latest unemployment data has surprised most observers. Source: Getty / Manfred Gottschalk
Aird said the labour market would need to show signs of softening too.

Softer wages data of late suggested the RBA should not be so worried about the low unemployment rate contributing to inflation, he said.

The RBA estimates the non‑accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU) — which represents so-called full employment or the unemployment rate consistent with maintaining stable inflation — to be 4.5 per cent.

"Australia should be able to run an unemployment rate of about 4.0 per cent and see inflation within the target band sustainably," Aird said.

"But we don't know if the RBA shares our view (or is coming around to our view)."

Data from online jobs marketplace Seek's November employment report painted a softer picture of labour demand, Aird said.
Job ads fell 1.1 per cent over the month, while applications per job ad rose 3.4 per cent — the largest increase since April.

JP Morgan analyst Ben Jarman also predicted a February cut, despite the unemployment result being particularly surprising since it diverged from softening in other economic data and survey proxies for labour demand.

But there were enough "unusual dynamics in the details" to suggest nothing had fundamentally changed in the labour market.

Bond traders were optimistic too, with the money market implying a 55 per cent probability of a February rate cut, albeit down from more than a two-thirds chance.

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3 min read
Published 13 December 2024 7:14am
Source: AAP



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