Australia Holds Rates at 4.5%; Canada is First G-7 Country to Hike
Interest-Rates / Financial Markets 2010 Jun 01, 2010 - 11:46 AM GMTBy: Mike_Shedlock
 Australia may have seen its last rate hike for quite some time. Today the Reserve Bank of Australia Holds Rate at 4.5% to Gauge Market   Turmoil.
Australia may have seen its last rate hike for quite some time. Today the Reserve Bank of Australia Holds Rate at 4.5% to Gauge Market   Turmoil.
Australia’s central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged   and signaled it may keep borrowing costs steady in coming months as it assesses   the impact of the most aggressive rate increases in the Group of   20.
  
  Governor Glenn Stevens and his policy-setting board kept the   overnight cash rate target at 4.5 percent, the Reserve Bank of Australia said in   a statement in Sydney today. The decision was predicted by all 22 economists   surveyed by Bloomberg News.
  
  “They’re not going to be looking to hike   interest rates for the next couple of months,” said Ben Dinte, an economist at   Macquarie Group Ltd. in Sydney. “But at the same time they’re still commenting   on the terms of trade and inflation. While they’re on hold, they’re not ruling   out further increases later this year or early 2011.”
  
  Stevens increased   rates from a half-century low of 3 percent in early October, citing surging   Asian demand for Australian commodities and a jobs boom that has pushed down   unemployment to around half that of the U.S. and Europe.
  
The   interest-rate moves helped stoke a 27 percent gain in Australia’s dollar in the   12 months through April 30, making it the second-best performer among the   world’s 16 most-traded currencies. The currency has since pared around half of   those gains as European Union policy makers moved to prevent a potential Greek   debt default.
Canada is First G-7 Country to Hike
 In what is likely a symbolic measure more than   anything else, Canada Hikes Interest Rate to 0.5%
Canada on Tuesday became the first Group of Seven nation to raise   interest rates since the global financial crisis, but said any further hikes   would depend on global economic conditions.
  
  The Bank of Canada increased   its key interest rate by a quarter point to .50 percent from a record-low rate   of .25 percent. It said the decision to raise rates still leaves considerable   monetary stimulus in place.
  
  Economists widely expected the central bank   to raise rates after the country's economy grew 6.1 percent in the first three   months of this year, emerging from the global downturn faster than the   U.S.
  
  "While Canada joined with other countries in taking interest rates   down to virtually zero the sense of crisis was never as great here," said Avery   Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets.
  
  Shenfeld pointed out   that the central bank didn't include the usual statement about further rate   hikes being required.
  
"They've left themselves an out to stop after one   trivial move if financial markets and commodity markets continue to tell them   that the global economy is going in the other direction," Shenfeld   said.
With GDP growing at 6.1% the central bank sure seems tepid   with this policy decision.
  
  Could it be the Canadian Central bank does not   believe the recovery? Or is is the Canadian Central Bank fears the busting of   Canada's housing bubble.
  
  My bet is both. Regardless, it's far too late to   do anything about Canada's property bubble. It's a case of Hosed in Canada; Housing Crash is a Given.
Canadian Dollar Weekly
  
  The   Canadian dollar did not approach the 1.10 area it hit in October, 2007. The   factors in play now are energy and metal prices, Canada's interest rate at .5%,   and Canada's housing bubble.
  
  Falling crude prices , tepid rate hikes, and   a bursting of the property bubble all weigh against a strengthening   Loonie.
  
  Australian Dollar   Weekly
  
  
  The   same factors are in play in Australia as with Canada in regards to the strength   of the Australian dollar. One difference is Australia has plenty of room to cut,   Canada does not.
  
  The next set of moves by the Reserve Bank of Australia   will likely be lower along with a weakening housing market. Expect to see the   Australia dollar weaken as well if the reserve bank aggressively cuts rates   hoping to keep the property bubble alive.
By Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Mike Shedlock / Mish is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management . Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. 
  
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