Westpac pushes back official cash rate increase forecast

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Westpac still expects the official cash rate to need to lift again, but not until the end of the year, its chief economist says.

Kelly Eckhold said the bank’s economists had revised their forecast on the back of recent data.

“We’re still projecting a 5.75% peak in the cash rate but we’ve moved it out to the November monetary policy statement,” he said.

“We had to take an assessment of whether enough data had come out to move the Reserve Bank away from its strong on-hold stance. The GDP data was a bit weaker than everyone expected, so it would have claimed that as a win and unemployment ticked up a touch but generally that labour market is still pretty strong.

“CPI was quite a bit stronger than they would have liked to have seen. Generally, we interpret the environment going in the direction we think but the Reserve Bank is strongly in favour of hold at the moment and we don’t think there’s enough to move their opinion now.”

He said another hike was likely to happen because there was still too much inflation in the system.

Westpac still expects the OCR to h it 5.75%.

Chris McKeen/Stuff

Westpac still expects the OCR to h it 5.75%.

“The June quarter CPI outcome was particularly good evidence of that. Non-tradeable inflation really only fell by quite a small amount. That surprised everybody in the market, including ourselves. What that tells you, that’s the message we’ve seen in other jurisdcitions as well, it takes a long time to squeeze all this inflation out of the system and the longer it takes the bigger the risk that you have to do quite a lot of tightening to squeeze it out.”

He said migration was still strong and the housing market had recovered sooner than expected.

“We also have concerns that the Reserve Bank expects a recession to be in play from the second half of this year, where we are now. Looking at the labour market, we’re not sure that’s realistic right.

“You need to have that period of below-trend growth for a while to bring inflation down. The Reserve Bank had a reason why it was forecasting a recession, that’s what they feel was necessary to do the job. We’re not sure we’ll see that outcome if it keeps the official cash rate at 5.5%”

He said a higher official cash rate was not yet priced into home loans, so if there was another increase it could push them higher.

Banks’ interest rates had moved in recent weeks as other countries’ interest rate expectations were revised up, he said.