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    RBA

    Today

    Commentators telling the RBA to cut or raise rates are ‘false prophets’ who could cause damage with their poor predictions, deputy governor Andrew Hauser warns.

    Stop telling us what to do with interest rates: RBA deputy

    Commentators telling the RBA to cut or raise rates are “false prophets” who could cause damage with their poor predictions, deputy governor Andrew Hauser warns.

    • 1 hr ago
    • Michael Read

    Yesterday

    Reserve Bank of Australia governor Michele Bullock: If her word is her bond, then it’s been downgraded to junk.

    Reserve Bank has finally taken the inflation crisis seriously

    The consumer price index reading gave the RBA an out. Instead, governor Michele Bullock’s tough talk dumped cold water on a rate cut any time soon.

    • Steven Hamilton

    This Month

    Anthony Albanese, Michele Bullock, Jim Chalmers

    RBA returns serve on inflation

    The RBA’s take down of government spending is reverberating loudly in Canberra and can only undermine Labor’s key argument that its fiscal policy complements monetary policy.

    • Jennifer Hewett
    Michele Bullock’s remarks come amid a split between the RBA and the Albanese government over the economic outlook.

    Rising costs hit Mirvac margins, new homes

    Property developer Mirvac blamed the steep rise in labour and material costs for halving its profit margins on some residential projects, triggering a 13 per cent fall in operating earnings this year.

    • Michael Read and Nick Lenaghan
    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and RBA governor Michele Bullock.

    Labor working ‘arm-in-arm’ with RBA on inflation, Albanese insists

    The prime minister has pushed back on claims that federal government spending is making it harder for the Reserve Bank to tame inflation.

    • Tom McIlroy
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    Chalmers’ rebates not helping inflation, RBA warns

    Federal and state government energy bill subsidies will not help get inflation under control, and big-spending public sector budgets are making it worse, the bank says.

    • Updated
    • Michael Read
    The bond market is sticking with its rate cut forecasts for 2024, despite what governor Michele Bullock says.

    Why the market doesn’t believe the RBA on rates

    Despite the surprisingly strong hawkish rhetoric from the Reserve Bank this week, bond traders (and some economists) aren’t buying it.

    • Updated
    • Cecile Lefort and Sarah Jones
    xx

    Chalmers disputes RBA; Rex sale looms; Why Harris chose Walz

    Read everything that’s happened in the news so far today.

    RBA governor Michele Bullock in Sydney on Tuesday.

    RBA warns rate cuts are a no-go this year

    Why interest rates won’t come down this year after all. They might even go up.

    • Jennifer Hewett
    Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia Michele Bullock said the board seriously considered raising the cash rate on Tuesday.

    Traders don’t believe the RBA’s warning on rates

    Bond markets are still wagering that the Reserve Bank will cut interest rates this year even as the central bank said it considered a rise on Tuesday.

    • Cecile Lefort
    Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia Michelle Bullock during yesterday’s news conference.

    Bullock talks tough, but board can’t stomach raising rates

    The RBA has squibbed again this month. With long-run credibility on the line, it needs to focus on getting inflation inside the target band.

    • Richard Holden

    Rise in interest rates only narrowly avoided

    A rate increase was closer than many had assumed at the RBA meeting, and a more hawkish-sounding Bullock said it “was a very serious consideration”.

    • Updated
    • John Kehoe
    Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock.

    Inflation to linger until 2026, RBA warns

    A surge in state and federal government spending means inflation won’t return to the RBA’s target band until December 2026, later than previously forecast.

    • Michael Read
    The central bank still has to fix a domestic inflationary problem, its latest monetary statement has emphasised.

    RBA at odds with the market and the world

    A panicked market is convinced the central bank faced a simple choice to prepare for interest rate cuts. Its staffers clearly don’t see it that way as the bank laid out the case for increases.

    • Jonathan Shapiro

    No rate cuts before Christmas, says RBA governor

    Michele Bullock has declared “near-term interest rate cuts are not on the agenda”, warning the economy remained too hot and ruling out decreasing the cash rate before Christmas.

    • Michael Read
    Advertisement
    The Topix Index displayed inside the Kabuto One building in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday.

    Battered investors get a breather, but where to next?

    After a torrid night on Wall Street, it’s calmer on the ASX and positively giddy in Tokyo, giving investors a chance to consider their next move. 

    • James Thomson
    Inflation, interest rates and artificial intelligence will dominate this week.

    Five things investors need to watch next

    Spotting the next shoe to drop in markets is never easy. But there are a few spots investors can look for signs of stress. 

    • James Thomson
    Investors are on a knife-edge as markets around the world tumble.

    Why the market’s favourite trades are blowing up

    For most of the day it was just a nasty sell-off. But by the end of Monday’s brutal session on the ASX, it was clear something much worse was at play.

    • James Thomson
    Last week’s Consumer Price Index reading is unlikely to be bad enough to prompt Michele Bullock’s Reserve Bank into a 14th increase in its benchmark policy rate.

    Recession fears no reason for RBA rate cut

    It remains a long bow to suggest the sell-off by rattled investors heralds a hard landing in the US economy and a global recession.

    • The AFR View
    There is no need for the RBA to have another stab at raising rates.

    RBA must say no to the Recessionistas out there

    The Reserve Bank is taking its dual mandate seriously and seems to be ignoring the incessant clamouring for another rise in the cash rate.

    • Craig Emerson