Rates To Keep Falling

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

A surprise expansion in the trade surplus for September (the biggest in 11 years), the Aussie dollar was a bit firmer, but the building approvals for September were miserable.

All the pain and bleeding in the federal budget from the crunch won’t stop the Reserve Bank from cutting rates again, nor will those poor mid year economic forecasts from the federal government.

But a very sharp 7% plunge in total building approvals in September completely justified the 0.75% cut in rates Tuesday, and the 1% in October, and more to come.

The extent of the slump in approvals was surprisingly large and bad.The October figures will not be good. Hopes for a steadying in home building have not held.

It was a seven year low in building approvals. The last time they were around this level was in April 2001, in the post GST slump.

Total building approvals fell 7.2% to 11,167 units, seasonally adjusted, in September, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) figures released yesterday. There was a fall of 3.4% in September, so October’s fall was double that drop.

The market forecast was for a fall of just 1.2%

In the year to September, building approvals were down a massive 21.6%.

Approvals for private sector houses fell 4.7% in the month while approvals for private sector "other dwellings" (such as flats) declined 15.2%. That’s investors bailing out.

The figures were clearly influenced by the mid month slump and credit freeze after the failure of Lehman Brothers.

That continued into October and those figures now look as though they will be horrible.

The latest economic forecasts, released yesterday as speculation rose about the US election results, showed a $40 billion hole in the budgeted surpluses over the next four years and a rise in unemployment to 5.75% in 2010.

But that wouldn’t have surprised the RBA, which will update its own forecasts (but not for employment, it’s too political) in its new Monetary Policy report next Monday.

Other ABS figures showed the trade surplus increased to $1.46 billion from a downwardly revised $1.24 billion in August, almost triple market estimates of $500 million.

Exports rose 8% to a record $26.5 billion in September, with the value of iron ore shipments up 19% and coal 14%. Imports jumped 7% to $25 billion, led by a 7% increase in food shipments.

The trade figures were a rare bright spot in this week’s figures. Already we have had retail sales in September off 1.1% on an indicative basis, while manufacturing activity contracted to a new low in October, and job ads slumped sharply.

Later Thursday we should therefore see the first significant boost to our unemployment rate from the slump, with a sharp rise in the number of jobless.

For these reasons, we can expect another rate cut of 0.50% next month as an early Christmas present, according to market economists.

The Commonwealth Bank only passed on 0.58% of the 0.75% and yesterday Westpac went a bit further with a 0.65% cut and then pleaded poor mouth.

The reduction, to come into effect on Monday, will lower Westpac’s rate to 7.71%, with the CBA’s at 7.74%.

Westpac said it will also reduce interest rates on consumer credit cards and business credit cards by up to 80 basis points from November 14, which is a welcome move seeing how the bank and its peers have been slow to cut those rates since the RBA started cutting in September.

At least two of the market economists see a cash rate of 4.25% by the end of March next year, while UBS and TD Securities sees a rate of 4%.

Reaction to yesterday’s second larger than expected rate cut in a row was positive, for negative reasons.

The slowing economy is the negative, the positive was that the central bank is still ahead of the curve (that’s economist speak for cutting by more than you’d normally expect) and there’s still a chance we could avoid a recession, although there’s a gathering belief that won’t happen.

Goldman Sachs JBWere, who are on record as seeing the economy in a ‘technical recession’ in the current back half of calendar 2008 was sort of happy.

"In line with our bearish growth outlook, such an aggressive rate cut is certainly both welcome and warranted – but it was also somewhat surprising given some of the RBA’s hawkish rhetoric over recent weeks.

"While the RBA may be using speeches to calm markets and downplay the risk of a domestic recession, actions speak louder than words – not since the depths of the last recession (Nov 1991) has the RBA eased policy so aggressively as it has in recent months. 

"The central bank is clearly very concerned about the possibility of a severe downturn in the Australian economy. We sense this concern is well-placed.

"The commentary accompanying the decision appears to attribute the aggressive easing to a downgrade to the outlook for domestic activity as the positive boost to income from higher commodity prices unwinds. 

"We suspect Monday’s much weaker-than-expected economic data also had a material influence on the decision – this may eventually be borne out in the Board Minutes.

"The RBA appears quite open to further rate reductions and we believe these will be delivered as the degree of the current slowdown becomes increasingly evident (and the inflation outlook becomes more benign).

"We have retained our previous rates profile and expect a further 50bp reduction in December and an additional 50bp by March 2009. This will take the cash rate to 4.25% – which is also the ter

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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