April 25, 2024

Australian Central Bank Cuts Key Rate to Record Low

HONG KONG — The Australian central bank on Tuesday cut rates for the eighth time in less than two years in a bid to improve sluggish growth as a boom in mining investment over the past decade comes to an end.

The Reserve Bank of Australia lowered its benchmark cash rate by a quarter of a percentage point to a record low of 2.5 percent, bringing the total cuts since November 2011 to 2.25 percentage points.

Despite cooling growth in China, which is the main market for Australia’s mineral riches, resource exports are continuing to grow, and are expected to continue to do so as projects that are now in the pipeline begin operation.

But investments in the resource sector, which helped Australia weather the global turmoil of recent years better than other developed economies, are now petering out, leaving the country struggling to rebalance with other areas, like manufacturing and tourism.

A steady stream of interest rate cuts since late 2011 has helped cushion the economy so far, and data released Tuesday showed house prices in major Australian cities rose 2.4 percent in the second quarter — more than analysts had expected.

A slide in the Australian dollar could also help provide a lift to tourism. The Australian currency has fallen about 15 percent against the U.S. dollar since mid-April.

On the other hand, it remains well above where it has been for much of the past two decades. However, unemployment has edged up, and policy makers and analysts have warned that economic rebalancing will be challenging and take time.

In a statement accompanying the rate decision Tuesday, the central bank governor, Glenn Stevens, hinted at the divergent trends, saying that although there had recently been “signs of increased demand for finance by households,” the pace of borrowing had remained “relatively subdued.”

The latest interest rate cut had been widely expected after comments from Mr. Stevens in a speech last week about the end of the mining boom.

Resource sector investment, he said, had risen from an average of about 2 percent of gross domestic product to peak around 8 percent on the back of soaring international demand for resources.

“That big rise is now over, and a fall is in prospect, with uncertain timing. It could be quite a big fall in due course,” Mr. Stevens said.

Similarly, the government on Aug. 2 lowered its growth forecasts for the current financial year, which runs through June 2014, saying it expected expansion of 2.5 percent, rather than the 2.75 percent it had projected.

The “abnormal period of heavy reliance on one part of the economy” will come to an end, and “managing the transition back to more normal, broader based growth will be a key economic challenge over the next few years,” the government said in its assessment.

“If we don’t see some improvement in the leading indicators of the economy, such as job ads and business conditions,” or if the Australian dollar strengthens again, economists at UBS in Sydney wrote in a research note, the central bank “will likely have some further work to do either late this year or early 2014.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/07/business/global/australian-central-bank-cuts-key-rate-to-record-low.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

China’s Central Bank Raises Interest Rates Again

The central bank raised the benchmark one-year bank deposit rate by a  quarter of a percentage point, to 3.25  percent, effective Wednesday. The one-year lending rate rose by the same  amount, to 6.31 percent.

The latest rate increase, announced  on a national holiday when the financial  markets were closed, was widely expected by analysts, some of whom believe it  will be followed by another increase in May.

Raising interest rates should encourage depositors to hold more money in  their accounts and make it slightly  more costly for individuals and corporations to borrow from banks, which would help reduce spending and ease upward pressure on prices.

Wang Qing, an economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, said in a report released after the rate announcement that the move was possibly a reaction to signs of growing inflationary pressure on the consumer price index in March.

“This rate hike suggests that the March C.P.I. that is to be released early next week may have surprised to the  upside,” Mr. Wang said in his report. He said he believed the consumer price index had risen by  about 5.2 percent in March.

In February, consumer prices in China increased 4.9 percent, driven by an 11 percent rise in food prices, while producer prices rose 7.2 percent, the biggest increase since October 2008.

  Earlier on Tuesday,  the Reserve Bank of Australia kept that country’s interest rates steady and said that inflation had been held in check by “the high level of the exchange rate, the earlier decline in wages growth and strong competition in some key markets.” 

The European Central Bank is expected to raise interest rates when it meets on Thursday, but analysts predict the Bank of England will leave borrowing rates unchanged.  The Bank of Japan also meets Thursday and will be closely watched to see if it put in place any additional  policy measures in the wake of the disasters.

Beijing has been trying for months to slow economic growth by ordering  Chinese banks to moderate lending and  to hold onto larger reserves.

The government has also tried to ease  consumer price inflation with a rash of  measures, including agricultural subsidies, reducing transportation fees, releasing grain reserves and even pressuring state-owned companies — as  well as some foreign companies — not  to raise consumer prices.

Worried about social discontent over housing prices, Beijing has asked  local governments to find ways to stem  soaring property prices. It even set goals for increases in home prices this  year.

The problems China faces are in  sharp contrast to other parts of the  world. While the United States and  European Union are trying to ramp up  growth, China has been sizzling hot for  much of the last two years, partly because of a huge stimulus  package that went into effect in 2009,  fueling a nationwide housing and infrastructure boom.

Now, Beijing wants to moderate an  economy that has been growing by  about 10 percent a year for the last two years  but also to restructure and rebalance it  away from heavy reliance on exports and investment-led growth. Many economists have been warning that if China  wants to achieve sustainable growth it  needs to encourage more domestic consumption and to ease a widening income gap.

Interest rates are just one tool Beijing is using to get there. Analysts  say the government may have chosen to  act this week because there are growing  signs that inflation may not peak until  May or June.

Still, many economists are confident  China will succeed in slowing the economy down in the first half of this year.  They then expect it to loosen controls in  the latter part of the year and record yet  another year of strong growth — 9 percent or better — with a more modest  level of inflation at around 3 percent.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=1190ad8f0827813a3f0bcf132bfea545