Australia and New Zealand - Weekly Prospects
* The minutes from the RBA's June policy meeting were the highlight in Australia last week. The RBA Board acknowledged
that inflation had risen to an "uncomfortably high rate" and members were concerned that rising inflation expectations
may begin to affect wage and price setting behaviour; this would prompt the RBA to review its current policy stance. We
maintain our forecast that the RBA will leave rates steady for the remainder of 2008, but acknowledge the risk of an
upward move if domestic demand does not slow in line with the RBA's expectations. There is no data with potential policy
implications scheduled for release this week.
* Key economic indicators were absent from the New Zealand economic calendar last week, but this week brings the
important 1Q GDP and current account numbers. The Kiwi economy probably contracted 0.4%q/q in the March quarter, owing
mainly to weaker private consumption growth. With a contraction in GDP growth of 0.1%q/q also forecast for 2Q, the
economy looks to be in the midst of a technical recession. May trade numbers on Friday will likely show the trade
balance improving to a modest surplus.
* Global markets were rocked last summer by a credit crisis emanating from US housing finance. The reverberations of
this shock have produced painful financial adjustments that are weighing on growth. However, the global economy has
displayed impressive resilience so far and financial market turmoil, by itself, does not appear to threaten the life of
the expansion. Unfortunately, the reward for resilience has been a significant rise in inflation that is set to
intensify during the coming months. Headline consumer price inflation in the developed economies is set to reach 4%oya
next quarter, a level last seen in 1991. In emerging markets, consumer price inflation is headed for 8%oya. With a
material downshift in global growth also in the cards, it looks like we are entering a second summer of discontent as
stagflation adds insult to the still significant injuries being inflicted by last year's credit market turmoil.
* When the FOMC meets this week, no action or explicit policy guidance should be expected from the meeting statement.
Instead, the statement will signal that the Fed's bias is no longer skewed toward concern about growth and financial
stability and that it is committed to resisting an upcreep in inflation expectations. Viewed against the backdrop of its
current stance—the fed funds rate stands below core inflation—this would be an implicit signal of the path ahead for
policy. If this shift in risk perception is validated by economic and financial developments in the coming months, the
Fed is signalling that the rate normalization process is likely to start before year end.
* European policymakers face similar challenges, as they see growth slowing in an environment in which inflation is
rising and inflation expectations are drifting higher. Relative to the Federal Reserve, they have less concern about
recession risks and financial stability. As a result, they are likely to respond to the inflation pressures by
delivering modest rate hikes this summer.
ENDS
See... AusNZ_weekly_23June08.pdf