RBA: Minutes Reflect More Caution Than Downside Concerns, Nov Hold Plausible

Oct-14 01:11

The RBA minutes clearly reflected the Board’s caution at the 30 September decision to keep rates unchanged. Its “decisions”, ie. not just last month’s, “remain cautious and data dependent”. Thus the outcomes of releases between now and 4 November are very important and the tone of the minutes was clear that a rate cut at that meeting is not a given. Today’s September NAB business survey was consistent with an ongoing recovery in activity.

  • There were a number of observations that suggest the Board may hold again. It noted that “early indicators” for Q3 showed private demand could be recovering a bit faster than expected, so not just the backward-looking Q2 GDP data, and that it may have underestimated consumption growth in August. Also on growth, the US is “steady” and the risk from “higher tariffs” has “diminished”, while fiscal policy should support a weaker China.
  • Not only do the July/August CPI outcomes suggest Q3 inflation may be higher than the RBA expected in August but that combined with “broadly stable labour market conditions” may imply that it underestimated the extent of capacity pressures. As Governor Bullock noted, elevated services in other countries may have “potential lessons for Australia” too.
  • Monetary policy is deemed “restrictive” but the RBA doesn’t know by how much. It is seeing the impact of previous easing on housing and credit growth and it knows that it hasn’t fully fed through. It seems to be slightly uncomfortable with the current effect of easier financial conditions.
  • There was little discussion of downside risks with the only consideration in the minutes that staff projections “were not taking sufficient signal” from “persistent weakness in consumer sentiment”, softer employment and “timely indicators of wages”.
  • Key data coming up include 29 October Q3 CPI, 16 October September jobs, 31 October September private credit and 3 November September household spending. 

Historical bullets

AUSSIE 3-YEAR TECHS: (U5) Bounces Further Off Support

Sep-12 21:45
  • RES 3: 97.190 - High May 5 2023
  • RES 2: 96.932 - 76.4% of Mar-Nov ‘23 bear leg 
  • RES 1: 96.860 - High Apr 07
  • PRICE: 96.550 @ 15:36 BST Sep 12
  • SUP 1: 96.430/95.900 - Low Sep 3 / Low Jan 14  
  • SUP 2: 95.760 - Low 14 Nov ‘24
  • SUP 3: 95.480 - Low Jan 11 2023 and a major support 

Aussie 3-yr futures are trading off recent lows. A resumption of gains from here would further narrow the gap with resistance at 96.730, the Sep 17 ‘24 high, leaving 96.860 as the next key level. Any continuation lower would instead strengthen a bearish threat. This would refocus attention on 95.760, the 14 Nov ‘24 low. Conversely, a reversal higher would open 96.860, the Apr 7 high.

FED: MNI Fed Preview-September 2025: A Reluctant Return To Easing

Sep-12 21:16

We've published our preview of the upcoming FOMC meeting - Download Full Report Here

  • The Federal Reserve is set to resume its easing cycle at the September 16-17 meeting with a 25bp cut to the funds rate range to 4.00-4.25%.
  • The decision to cut after a 5-meeting pause was well-telegraphed by Chair Powell, whose Jackson Hole speech described a “shifting balance of risks” toward a weaker labor market that “may warrant adjusting our policy stance”.
  • The updated quarterly projections aren’t likely to bring many changes to the macroeconomic variables, but as usual the signal sent from the Fed rate “Dot Plot” will garner attention. A Committee split between expecting one or two further cuts this year is likely, keeping each of the remaining meetings of 2025 “live”.
  • The Statement will downgrade the description of the labor market to reflect a rise in the unemployment rate and poor payrolls growth, and is likely to include at least one dissent to the rate decision.
  • But with a Committee that is fairly divided on the way forward, Powell will be noncommittal on future action, reiterating that policy is not on a preset course, and upcoming decisions will be data-dependent.
  • A key undercurrent is an increasingly activist approach to Fed personnel management from the White House, which leaves the composition of the FOMC uncertain not just over the medium-term but also at this meeting. 

MNI’s separate preview of sell-side analyst summaries to follow on Monday Sep 15

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Source: Federal Reserve, MNI Markets Team Expectations

RATINGS: Fitch: France Cut To A+ From AA, Portugal Up To A From A-

Sep-12 21:07

Fitch has downgraded France's sovereign rating to A+ (with stable outlook) from AA-. Release here.

  • Among other factors in the decision, Fitch cites "High and Rising Debt Ratio", "Political Fragmentation Hinders Consolidation", "Weak Fiscal Record", "High 2025 Deficit", "Uncertain Fiscal Consolidation Path", and "Fiscal Rigidities".
  • In "Factors that Could, Individually or Collectively, Lead to Negative Rating Action/Downgrade", Fitch cites "Public Finances: A sustained increase in government debt/GDP over the medium term, due to failure to implement fiscal consolidation measures and/or a persistent increase in financing costs" and "Macro: Materially lower economic growth prospects and weakened competitiveness." Conversely, potentially leading to positive ratings action would be "Public Finances: Confidence that government debt/GDP will be put on a downward trajectory over the medium term, for example, due to fiscal consolidation and/or stronger economic growth".
  • Fitch also raised Portugal to A (stable outlook) from A-, while elsewhere, S&P raised Spain to A+ (stable outlook) from A.
  • As MNI wrote earlier, we expected France to be downgraded to A+ and Portugal to be upgraded to A.