Australian Inflation Remains Soft In 3Q; Rates Hike Unlikely


Australian inflation surprisingly slowed in the third quarter even with rising power prices.

Consumer Price Index which measures inflation rate climbed 0.6 percent in the third quarter, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics report released on Wednesday.

On a yearly basis, consumer prices were up 1.8 percent, below the Reserve Bank of Australia’s 2 to 3 percent target and economists’ expectation of 2 percent gain from a year earlier.

High foreign exchange rate continued to subdue prices even with a record-low unemployment rate. Meaning, rising household debt amid weak wage growth leave little to no room for monetary tightening if economic growth is still a priority.

In fact, some experts believe that with prices still weak across the board, the monetary rate is likely to remain unchanged throughout 2018, especially with China planning to cut down on Iron Ore import and institute tougher credit control measures to curb rising business debt. China is Australia’s largest trading partner.

“Consumer prices are amazingly benign across the economy,” said Matt Sherwood, Sydney-based head of investment strategy for fund manager Perpetual Investments.

“That’s because wages growth is at an all-time low, and households are saving more to pay down their debt,” he said. “It tells me that the RBA is on hold not only in 2017 but also all of 2018.”

Also, while energy prices rose the most in the quarter, rising 8.9 percent to add 0.25 percentage points to the overall Consumer Price Index. Economists see the gain as a mere increase in tax on consumer spending and not a sign of overheating demand associated with price pressures.

“This is the wrong type of inflation, in that the increases are in non-discretionary, regulatory type components,” said Su-Lin Ong, Sydney-based senior economist at RBC Capital.

The Australian dollar dipped across the board after the report, losing 0.9 percent against the US dollar to US77.03c.

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