|

AUD: Inflation shock keeps RBA under pressure – Commerzbank

Commerzbank’s Volkmar Baur notes Australian CPI slowed on a monthly basis but remains above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) 2–3% target. He stresses that surging Oil and gasoline prices, plus fertilizer-related risks to agriculture and food costs, mean inflation pressures will intensify, making another RBA rate hike more likely at the 5 May meeting if the conflict persists.

Oil and food risks threaten CPI path

"Seasonally adjusted prices in Australia rose by only 0.22% month-over-month last month, placing the annualized rate below the upper end of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range."

"The annual rate thus fell to 3.7%, but remains above the central bank’s target range (2–3%). In particular, sharply rising housing-related costs are now weighing on inflation following the final expiration of subsidies, just as the next price shock is looming."

"Currently, gasoline prices in Australia are about 22% higher than the previous month’s level, which — given a 3.5% weighting in the consumer price index basket — will on its own lead to a 0.7 percentage point increase in the CPI next month."

"And those are just the direct effects. Australian agriculture is heavily dependent on fertilizer imports, the global availability of which is currently also suffering due to the Iran conflict. Reports are therefore already circulating that a shortage of fertilizer will lead to less wheat being planted, which is likely to result in higher food prices later on."

"The situation therefore remains difficult for the Reserve Bank of Australia. Much will depend at the next meeting on May 5 on whether the conflict is still ongoing. If so, another hike in the key interest rate is more likely than not."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

USD/JPY bulls pause near 160.75 amid intervention risks

USD/JPY is consolidating below 160.75 in Thursday's Asian trading, with intervention fears lending support to the Japanese Yen and capping the pair's upside amid a modest US Dollar downtick. The signing of a US-Iran peace deal to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz undermines the Greenback's reserve-currency status.

AUD/USD rebounds toward 0.7050 on US-Iran deal optimism

AUD/USD bounces back toward 0.7050 in the Asian session on Thursday as the US Dollar retreats from its highest level since late March, touched in reaction to the Fed's hawkish tilt the previous day. The US and Iran electronically signed a MoU aimed at ending the war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, boosting investors' confidence and undermining the safe-haven USD.

Gold reclaims $4,300 as USD  cuts Fed-led gains amid US-Iran peace deal

Gold attracts fresh buyers and regains $4,300 in the Asian session on Thursday, reversing part of the previous day's hawkish Fed-inspired slump to a fresh weekly low. As traders price in the possibility of a Fed rate hike this year, the signing of a US-Iran peace deal – to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz – drags the safe-haven US Dollar away from its highest level since late March, offering support to the bullion.

Binance founder CZ urges governments to tokenize stock markets and launch sovereign stablecoins

Binance founder Changpeng Zhao has called on governments to tokenize their stock markets and issue sovereign stablecoins, arguing that blockchain technology can expand access to capital markets and increase the global use of national currencies. In an X post on Wednesday, CZ said countries should "tokenize their stocks, allowing worldwide buyers."

A new era for the Fed
The Fed has shifted to a more hawkish stance at the first meeting chaired by Kevin Warsh. Although rates were left unchanged, there will be meaningful adjustments to how the Federal Reserve operates in the coming months and years. There are two main takeaways from today’s meeting, firstly what the Fed did, and secondly, what they are planning to do.
Why a hawkish RBA is no longer enough to lift the Australian Dollar

The Reserve Bank of Australia delivered more than what markets expected: a hawkish hold that should have supported the Aussie. But markets widely ignored it, focusing instead on slowing economic growth and proving that central bank messaging alone isn’t always enough to drive currencies.