RBA: Board Wanted To Move “Predictably” In May, July Data & Event Dependent

Jun-03 02:18

The May meeting minutes confirmed that staying on hold, 25bp and 50bp rate cuts were discussed. It appears that not only is there considerable uncertainty regarding the outlook but that the Board prefers to remain cautious and move “predictably”, as a result it cut by the widely expected 25bp, which was also assumed in its updated staff projections. Given not just global uncertainties but also around the level of monetary restrictiveness and tightness in the labour market, another cut in July is not fixed and will be highly data and event dependent. 

  • Rates were cut by 25bp as that was assumption in the forecasts brought underlying inflation close to the band mid-point, the “progress made on inflation”, the “slightly softer outlook for domestic consumption”, global developments would like slow Australian growth, it was “predictable” and would leave room to respond to events. 
  • The Board decided to limit the move to 25bp because Australian data was yet to show any “adverse impact on domestic demand” from global events, concerns about Australia’s supply-side including productivity, “two-sided” uncertainty over the degree of labour market tightness, impact of a demand recovery on profit margins, trade policy outcomes and effects on global supply chains are still unknown, and it would be difficult to unwind “too rapid” easing.
  • The arguments to hold policy included that the stance of current policy is not judged “very restrictive”, headline inflation would rise again when electricity rebates ended, “labour and product markets remained relatively tight”, case to wait and see how global trade policy evolved and there were currently “few observable effects on the Australian economy”.
  • Domestic developments on their own warranted monetary policy easing, while global developments “strengthened the case”. The combination of the two is likely to be important for the rate outlook. 

Historical bullets

USDCAD TECHS: Hits Bear Trigger, New Cycle Low

May-02 20:00
  • RES 4: 1.4415 High Apr 1
  • RES 3: 1.4296 High Apr 7
  • RES 2: 1.4087 50-day EMA
  • RES 1: 1.3906/3935 High Apr 17 / 20-day EMA 
  • PRICE: 1.3793 @ 17:00 BST May 2
  • SUP 1: 1.3760 Low Apr 21 and the bear trigger
  • SUP 2: 1.3744 76.4% retracement of Sep 25 ‘24 - Feb 3 bull run
  • SUP 3: 1.3696 Low Oct 10 2024
  • SUP 4: 1.3643 Low Oct 9 ‘24 

The trend set-up in USDCAD deteriorated further Friday, with prices slipping through the bear trigger to narrow the gap with next support. The fresh cycle low reinforces the bear cycle and signals scope for a continuation near-term. Potential is seen for a move towards 1.3744, a Fibonacci retracement. Moving average studies are in a bear mode position, highlighting a dominant downtrend. First resistance to watch is 1.3943, the 20-day EMA.  

AUDUSD TECHS: Consolidation Phase

May-02 19:30
  • RES 4: 0.6550 61.8% retracement of the Sep 30 ‘24 - Apr 9 bear leg  
  • RES 3: 0.6528 High Nov 29 ‘24
  • RES 2: 0.6471 High Dec 9 ‘24
  • RES 1: 0.6470 High May 2
  • PRICE: 0.6445 @ 16:59 BST May 2
  • SUP 1: 0.6344/6316 Low Apr 24 / 50-day EMA  
  • SUP 2: 0.6181 Low Apr 11  
  • SUP 3: 0.6116 Low Apr 10 
  • SUP 4: 0.5915 Low Apr 9 and key support  

AUDUSD remains inside a consolidation phase, having traded either side of the 0.6400 level for 10 consecutive sessions. The underlying trend remains bullish and the pair is trading close to recent highs. Price has recently breached a key resistance at 0.6409, the Dec 9 ‘24 high. This breach reinforces bullish conditions and signals scope for a continuation higher near-term. Sights are on 0.6471 next, the Dec 9 2024 high. Initial key support to monitor is 0.6316, the 50-day EMA. A clear break of this EMA would be a concern for bulls.

US TSYS: Rates Retreat, Sentiment Improved Though Trade Risk Remains

May-02 19:24
  • Treasuries look to finish near late Friday session lows after trading firmer on the open, higher than expected Nonfarm payrolls at 177k (sa, cons 138k) of which private contributed 167k (sa, cons 125k) triggered the early reversal.
  • However, two-month revisions of -58k offset the 39k beat for nonfarm payrolls, with a similar story for private (a 42k surprise vs -48k two-month revision).
  • Stocks are back near four week highs - pre-"Liberation Day" levels as hopes of some trade deal being made improved sentiment.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports that "Beijing is considering ways to address the Trump administration’s gripes over China’s role in the fentanyl trade... potentially offering an off-ramp from hostilities to allow for trade talks to start." The Journal notes that "discussions remain fluid" and China "would like to see some softening of stance from President Trump".
  • Currently, the Jun'25 10Y contract trades -20 at 111-07.5 vs 111-02 low -- initial technical support (50-dma) followed by 110-16.5/109-08 (Low Apr 22 / 11 and the bear trigger). Curves bear flattened, 2s10s -3.480 at 48.002, 5s30s -4.911 at 86.807.