Research Briefing | Nov 9, 2021

RBA yield target capitulation signals tighter policy

Copy of Ipad Frame (48)The RBA’s yield curve targeting experiment ended this week not with a bang but a whimper. Market expectations for a cash rate hike, fuelled by stronger than- expected inflation data, pushed yields well beyond the RBA’s 0.1% target for the April 2024 bond. In a relatively thin market, the RBA had little choice but to let the target fold, at the cost of some credibility in financial markets.

What you will learn:

  • We expect the cash rate will be on hold through 2022. Nevertheless, the yield curve has shifted up in recent months, and the short end has now lost its policy anchor. This is already feeding through to higher rates for long-term, fixed rate mortgages, and a similar upward drift can be expected for other borrowing rates in the coming year.
  • Our expectation is that the cash rate will be on hold through 2022. However, there is a nascent tightening of monetary conditions occurring, which will be hastened by the end of the yield target.
  • Against the backdrop of tighter conditions, the RBA’s Term Funding Facility (TFF) will provide some relief to banks’ funding costs and so lending interest rates.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

Post

Little by little—Manchester is closing the output gap

Greater Manchester has led the UK economy since 2008, driven by knowledge jobs, transport upgrades, and housing growth—but can prosperity reach its outer districts?

Find Out More

Post

Asia’s cities are reshaping the world

From Seoul to Delhi and Shanghai, Asia’s urban centres are rapidly overtaking global rivals as living standards soar. What will this mean for the balance of global economic power?

Find Out More
[autopilot_shortcode]