- It was unanimous. There were no discussions about a larger rate cut.
- Neutral rate is between 3.1% and 3.4%.
- The RBA’s focus remains on what’s happening with inflation, what’s happening with employment, rather than a specific neutral rate.
- We don’t have a point estimate of where we might end up.
- The board has to be taking things meeting by meeting and absorbing the data.
- If we held the interest rate where it is and we didn’t cut, we would expect lower inflation and higher unemployment.
- The forecasts are conditioned on a couple more cuts.
- Governor Bullock didn’t write off back-to-back cuts, noting the RBA will look at the data and assess at each meeting.
- Our inflation is gradually returning sustainably to the target, and the unemployment rate is remaining pretty low in a historical sense. That is the good news here. And so far, that doesn’t suggest we had interest rates too high.
RBA Avoids Market Shock, Signaling a Softer Inflation Outlook
Earlier on Tuesday, August 12, the RBA cut interest rates after an extended holding period. Updated staff forecasts for the August meeting indicated underlying inflation would continue to fall toward the midpoint of the 2-3% target.
Expert Views on the RBA Rate Path
Shane Oliver, Head of Investment Strategy and Chief Economist at AMP, remarked on the RBA’s interest rate decision, stating:
“RBA forecasts – which see slightly lower grth than in May, unemployment at 4.3% & inflation at target – are predicated on further gradual rate cuts to 2.9% next yr. Without that inflation would likely be lower & unemp higher. So, we continue to expect 0.25% cuts in Nov, Feb, & May.”
AUD/USD Reacts to Governor Michele Bullock’s Q&A Session
The AUD/USD pair soared in reaction to the RBA’s interest rate decision, briefly rising to a high of $0.65167 before tumbling below the $0.65 mark.
The AUD/USD recovered some losses during the RBA press conference, climbing from $0.64987 to a high of $0.65049 before dropping to a session low of $0.64937. The market reaction reflected hopes of further policy easing, widening the US-Australia interest rate differential in favor of the US dollar.
On Tuesday, August 12, the AUD/USD was down 0.19% to $0.64999.

