Australian News Today

Australia’s Robust Jobs Market Dims Hope of 2024 Rate Cut

Australia’s Robust Jobs Market Dims Hope of 2024 Rate Cut

 

Australia is enjoying robust employment, according to the latest official data released on Thursday.

The jobs performance over the past six months has defied expectations and beat forecasts by a large margin in September, when the jobless rate held steady, suggesting the labour market remains tight as market bets for a rate cut by year end diminish.

The Australian dollar rose 0.5% to $0.6698, rebounding from a one-month low, while the three-year government bond yield jumped 7 basis points to 3.829%.

 

ALSO SEE: Scientists Fear Nature’s Carbon Sinks Are Failing – Guardian

 

Markets pared the chance for a first interest-rate cut from the Reserve Bank of Australia in December to 30% from 46% before the data. They are now not even sure if a cut will come in February next year, with just 75% priced in.

“We see no incentive to shift from our call that the RBA won’t even start cutting rates until 1Q 2025, and there is a chance that even this is too aggressive,” Robert Carnell, the regional head of Asia Pacific research at ING, said.

Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Thursday showed net employment surged 64,100 in September from August, when they rose a downwardly revised 42,600.

That was well above market forecasts for a 25,000 rise, and most of the gains were in full-time employment.

The jobless rate held relatively steady at a downwardly adjusted 4.1% where it has generally been over the past six months, noted the ABS.

 

Chance of rate cut pushed back

The participation rate edged up to another all-time high of 67.2% as the workforce expanded rapidly.

Bjorn Jarvis, ABS head of labour statistics, noted that there are still large numbers of people entering the labour force and finding work in a range of industries, given the still elevated job ads.

The Reserve Bank has held its policy steady since November, judging the current cash rate of 4.35% – up from 0.1% during the pandemic – is restrictive enough to bring inflation to its target band of 2-3% while preserving employment gains.

However, underlying inflation has remained sticky and the labour market is only slowing gradually, a reason that the RBA has all but ruled out a rate cut this year, lagging other major central banks in kick starting an easing cycle.

Headline inflation did slow to 2.7% in August, due to government electricity rebates, but the RBA has warned the monthly measure is volatile and it would look through the temporary impact.

The job report showed hours worked rose 0.3% in September, after an increase of 0.4%, while the underemployment rate fell 0.1 percentage point to 6.3%, all pointing to a strong labour market.

“Ultimately, this means less pressure on the RBA to bring forward its rate cut timeline,” Russel Chesler, VanEck head of investments & capital markets, said.

“The hot jobs market is preventing inflation from falling much further, as it is keeping services inflation persistently high … The market is pricing in cuts to start by February 2025, but we believe rate cuts will start much later in 2025.”

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

Australian Extensions for Coal Mines Angers Pacific States

Continued Fossil Fuel Investments Put $557 Trillion ‘At Risk’

Big Oil All Talk And No Action on Climate Change, Report Says

Renewables Now Source of 30% of World’s Power – Guardian

Australian Banks Wind Down Loans to Carbon-Intensive Projects

World Bank Looking to Bolster Financial Links for Pacific Islands

Chinese PM’s Australian Tour Highlights Critical Minerals Race

Australia’s Clean Energy Plan Delays $10.6bn Origin Takeover Bid

China and Australia Seek an End to Bilateral Trade Rows

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.