>
RBA Aussie Silence as Much About Economy as U.S. Jawboning Alert
RBA Aussie Silence as Much About Economy as U.S. Jawboning Alert
Wednesday,23/03/2016|22:48GMTby
Bloomberg News
The Australian central bank’s reluctance to chastise traders as the Aussie dollar rallied as much as 12 percent from...
The Australian central bank’s reluctance to chastise traders as the Aussie dollar rallied as much as 12 percent from its January low is as much about an improving economy as it is about staying out of currency wars.
“Jawboning the currency isn’t likely to have a sustained impact if not backed by either rate cut or intervention threats,” said Sean Callow, a senior foreign-exchange strategist in Sydney at Westpac Banking Corp. “The RBA’s easing bias is fairly mild and focused more on domestic demand prospects and Stevens sounded proud of the absence of RBA intervention in recent years, so that’s even less of a threat.”
‘Normal’ Policy
Policy makers have expressed a reluctance to lower interest rates since its last move down in May and Stevens on Tuesday said the economy is “adjusting quite well” to lower commodity prices, making the RBA somewhat complicit in the Aussie’s rebound. Australia’s 2 percent cash rate stands in contrast to Japan and Europe, where central banks have engaged in asset-purchase programs and adopted negative rates.
The central bank chief said this week that the RBA runs “normal” monetary policy and hasn’t intervened in markets during a period when the local currency has traded as high as $1.1081 in 2011 and been less responsive to falling commodity prices. “Occasionally we have an opinion about a market price, which is not that unknown in central banking circles,” he said.
The Australian dollar was at 75.21 U.S. cents as of 11:30 a.m. on Thursday in Sydney, having bounced back from an almost seven-year low of 68.27 touched Jan. 15.
Stevens’s comments on Tuesday suggest there is no practical change in the RBA’s approach to the currency, according to Callow.
The following charts look at Australia’s export prices and gains in the currency, the impact of changing rate expectations from the RBA and Federal Reserve, and the South Pacific nation’s yield advantage.
CHART 1: The recent appreciation in the Australian dollar reflects a recovery in the price of exports versus imports, the so-called terms of trade.
CHART 3: Australian sovereign yields for debt due in a year climbed above the 2 percent cash rate this month for the first time since mid-January, taking the entire yield curve above the cash rate. Yields have climbed as stability in equity and commodity markets combined with improved prospects for higher U.S. rate increases. The yield premium for two-year Australian securities over U.S. notes of comparable maturity was at 1.11 percentage points, while for German bunds it was 2.45.
To contact the reporters on this story: Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net, Benjamin Purvis in Sydney at bpurvis@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Sandy Hendry at shendry@bloomberg.net, Naoto Hosoda, Amit Prakash
The Australian central bank’s reluctance to chastise traders as the Aussie dollar rallied as much as 12 percent from its January low is as much about an improving economy as it is about staying out of currency wars.
“Jawboning the currency isn’t likely to have a sustained impact if not backed by either rate cut or intervention threats,” said Sean Callow, a senior foreign-exchange strategist in Sydney at Westpac Banking Corp. “The RBA’s easing bias is fairly mild and focused more on domestic demand prospects and Stevens sounded proud of the absence of RBA intervention in recent years, so that’s even less of a threat.”
‘Normal’ Policy
Policy makers have expressed a reluctance to lower interest rates since its last move down in May and Stevens on Tuesday said the economy is “adjusting quite well” to lower commodity prices, making the RBA somewhat complicit in the Aussie’s rebound. Australia’s 2 percent cash rate stands in contrast to Japan and Europe, where central banks have engaged in asset-purchase programs and adopted negative rates.
The central bank chief said this week that the RBA runs “normal” monetary policy and hasn’t intervened in markets during a period when the local currency has traded as high as $1.1081 in 2011 and been less responsive to falling commodity prices. “Occasionally we have an opinion about a market price, which is not that unknown in central banking circles,” he said.
The Australian dollar was at 75.21 U.S. cents as of 11:30 a.m. on Thursday in Sydney, having bounced back from an almost seven-year low of 68.27 touched Jan. 15.
Stevens’s comments on Tuesday suggest there is no practical change in the RBA’s approach to the currency, according to Callow.
The following charts look at Australia’s export prices and gains in the currency, the impact of changing rate expectations from the RBA and Federal Reserve, and the South Pacific nation’s yield advantage.
CHART 1: The recent appreciation in the Australian dollar reflects a recovery in the price of exports versus imports, the so-called terms of trade.
CHART 3: Australian sovereign yields for debt due in a year climbed above the 2 percent cash rate this month for the first time since mid-January, taking the entire yield curve above the cash rate. Yields have climbed as stability in equity and commodity markets combined with improved prospects for higher U.S. rate increases. The yield premium for two-year Australian securities over U.S. notes of comparable maturity was at 1.11 percentage points, while for German bunds it was 2.45.
To contact the reporters on this story: Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net, Benjamin Purvis in Sydney at bpurvis@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Sandy Hendry at shendry@bloomberg.net, Naoto Hosoda, Amit Prakash
Clearstream to Settle LCH-Cleared Equity Contracts
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 8 May 2026
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: Are brokers and prop firms wasting marketing budgets by confusing finfluencer reach with trust? Also ahead: an AWS outage impacting Coinbase, and Flutter reveals its real revenue strategy in prediction markets. It's Friday, the eighth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 7 May 2026
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Colombia is emerging as a key hub for global retail brokers as CFI expands its footprint in Bogotá. Also ahead: a decade review of listed CFD brokers shows sharply diverging performance, and UK retail investing debates highlight a widening gap between policy design and younger investors. It’s Thursday, the seventh of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 6 May 2026
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: brokers are doubling down on Singapore, with Saxo launching a premium tier and CMC restructuring ahead of a multi-asset push. Also ahead: the UAE licensing race heats up, and a deeper shift in broker business models. It’s Wednesday, the sixth of May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.