One of Australia’s biggest banks says interest rate pain is over – for now
The Reserve Bank has lifted interest rates at its past three meetings. But the NAB believes its next move will be a cut to prop up a struggling economy.
One of the nation’s biggest lenders believes the Reserve Bank has finished inflicting more pain on borrowers, predicting rate cuts are coming to prop up an economy struggling to deal with high inflation, the war against Iran and the fallout from the federal government’s budget tax changes.
Senior economists with NAB on Tuesday said the Reserve was likely to start cutting interest rates in the first half of next year, even though financial markets currently believe there’s more chance the bank will deliver a further quarter percentage point hit to people with a mortgage by Christmas.
National accounts last week revealed economic growth slowing through the first three months, unemployment has pushed up to 4.5 per cent while inflation – though still well above the RBA’s 2-3 per cent target band – was actually lower than feared in April.
House prices, which can influence consumer spending, are also easing. NAB is forecasting prices in Sydney to fall by 6 per cent his year and by 7 per cent in Melbourne.
NAB chief economist Sally Auld and the bank’s head of Australian economics, Gareth Spence, said this afternoon that the headwinds facing the country meant the RBA – which has lifted rates at its past three meetings – would now hold the cash rate steady.
They said rather than lifting rates, the bank was more likely to start cutting rates early in 2027, with the cash rate at 3.6 per cent by year’s end.
A key factor is the strength of the property market, which is likely to be affected by the government’s changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax. A bigger-than-expected slowdown in housing could force the RBA to move even faster.
“The next move in the cash rate is likely to be down, but the timing is uncertain,” they said.
“Should activity data weaken more quickly than anticipated, the RBA will cut earlier than we currently forecast.”
Measures of consumer confidence are suggesting the economy could deteriorate further.
The closely watched Westpac-Melbourne Institute measure of sentiment slipped 2.9 per cent this month to close to its lowest level in its 50-year history.
Pessimists outnumber optimists by almost 20 per cent, with people particularly concerned about their family finances now and over the coming 12 months.
Westpac’s head of macro-forecasting, Matthew Hassan, said inflation remains uppermost in the minds of consumers, with only the war against Iran shading it as an issue.
But the May budget and its various tax measures are also weighing on attitudes towards the economy.
“The survey detail shows cost-of-living issues remain front
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