Home » Big four banks warn first rate cut won’t come until November, as ‘incredibly strong’ migration makes the RBA’s task ‘more difficult’

Big four banks warn first rate cut won’t come until November, as ‘incredibly strong’ migration makes the RBA’s task ‘more difficult’

Big four banks warn first rate cut won’t come until November, as ‘incredibly strong’ migration makes the RBA’s task ‘more difficult’

Commonwealth Bank economists have revised their interest rate forecasts, saying they now don’t expect the Reserve Bank to cut rates until November.

They had been expecting a rate cut in September, followed by one in November and another in December.

But after last week’s stronger-than-expected March quarter inflation figure, they say the only rate cut Australians will see this year will probably be in November.

Their revised forecasts mean the economics teams working for Australia’s “Big Four” banks are now all on the same page.

They all predict there will only be one rate cut this year, in November, worth 0.25 percentage points.

CBA senior economist Gareth Aird says extremely strong population growth is making it much harder for the RBA to return inflation to target.

“Monetary and fiscal policy are working in tandem,” he wrote on Tuesday.

“But incredibly strong net overseas immigration has put upward pressure on some components of the consumer price index basket. This has made the RBA’s task of returning inflation to target more difficult.

“As a consequence, monetary policy is now likely to stay at a restrictive setting for longer.

“We now see a more elongated and conservative easing cycle than previously expected. Our base case sees the cash rate gradually cut from November 2024 to reach 3.10 per cent at end‑2025,” he wrote.

The cash rate target is currently 4.35 per cent.

Within hours of CBA releasing its revised forecasts on Tuesday, new data from the Bureau of Statistics showed retail spending had fallen by 0.4 per cent in March, which was a much larger fall than expected.

ABS officials said the decline in retail spending in March was the weakest on record, outside of the pandemic period and introduction of the GST, when comparing turnover to the same time in the previous year.

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