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RBA Rate Cut in Response to Stronger Aussie Seen by Bond Bull
RBA Rate Cut in Response to Stronger Aussie Seen by Bond Bull
Tuesday,29/03/2016|01:51GMTby
Bloomberg News
BT Investment Management is betting that an overvalued currency will shake the Reserve Bank of Australia’s confidence in the...
BT Investment Management is betting that an overvalued currency will shake the Reserve Bank of Australia’s confidence in the economy and force it to slash interest rates.
The Australian dollar has already risen 3.9 percent percent this year to 75.69 U.S. cents as of 2:48 p.m. on Tuesday in Sydney. It could reach 80 cents, according to the fund manager’s Sydney-based head of fixed income Vimal Gor, who helps oversee about A$15 billion ($11 billion). He reckons the economic drag created by an overly strong Aussie is likely to spur at least half a percentage point of rate cuts from the RBA, which has already reduced the cash rate to a record-low 2 percent.
“We’re just sitting here on a slow glide path lower in terms of growth; unfortunately at the same time the currency’s appreciating, which exacerbates the slowdown,” Gor said in an interview last week.
Intermittent RBA rate cuts over more than four years have helped to support Australia’s economy amid a slump in mining investment and a drop in commodity prices. Part of the benefit has come from a weaker currency, a gain that is now being undermined as the Aussie rebounds amid fresh injections of stimulus from Europe to Japan and New Zealand.
While economic indicators haven’t yet been weak enough to prompt further RBA cuts and BT has pushed back its easing forecasts, Gor fully expects the central bank to reduce rates even as Governor Glenn Stevens signals his reluctance to budge.
The BT Wholesale Fixed Interest Fund has delivered an average annual gain of 6.1 percent over the past five years, outstripping the returns of about 90 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Gor says he is looking for opportunities to bet on a decline in the Australian dollar, though he predicts that it could climb toward 80 cents in the short-term. The median estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg is for a 6 percent drop to 71 by year-end.
“In a world which is searching for higher-yielding assets at the moment, I think Aussie bonds still look OK and the Aussie currency looks OK,” he said. “One or two-year view, I’d definitely be short. But on a two-week to three-month view, I don’t think I want to have a position on it right now.”
U.S. Criticism
Gor said a year ago that the RBA cash rate could drop as low as 1 percent and he still sees a risk of it falling below 1.5 percent. While Stevens has kept Australia’s benchmark unchanged since last May and expressed a disinclination to go lower, Gor sees the pressures of global “currency wars” forcing the governor’s hand as the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan take their benchmarks deeper below zero.
The decision by the U.S. Treasury to criticize the RBA’s commentary on the currency means that so-called jawboning might, at the margin, become a less appealing option for Stevens and that could add to the prospects for interest-rate cuts, Gor said.
“By not lowering interest rates, you hold the currency up higher than it ultimately would be,” said Gor. “I’m pretty sure the RBA would rather the currency wasn’t 10 percent overvalued.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Benjamin Purvis in Sydney at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells, Naoto Hosoda
BT Investment Management is betting that an overvalued currency will shake the Reserve Bank of Australia’s confidence in the economy and force it to slash interest rates.
The Australian dollar has already risen 3.9 percent percent this year to 75.69 U.S. cents as of 2:48 p.m. on Tuesday in Sydney. It could reach 80 cents, according to the fund manager’s Sydney-based head of fixed income Vimal Gor, who helps oversee about A$15 billion ($11 billion). He reckons the economic drag created by an overly strong Aussie is likely to spur at least half a percentage point of rate cuts from the RBA, which has already reduced the cash rate to a record-low 2 percent.
“We’re just sitting here on a slow glide path lower in terms of growth; unfortunately at the same time the currency’s appreciating, which exacerbates the slowdown,” Gor said in an interview last week.
Intermittent RBA rate cuts over more than four years have helped to support Australia’s economy amid a slump in mining investment and a drop in commodity prices. Part of the benefit has come from a weaker currency, a gain that is now being undermined as the Aussie rebounds amid fresh injections of stimulus from Europe to Japan and New Zealand.
While economic indicators haven’t yet been weak enough to prompt further RBA cuts and BT has pushed back its easing forecasts, Gor fully expects the central bank to reduce rates even as Governor Glenn Stevens signals his reluctance to budge.
The BT Wholesale Fixed Interest Fund has delivered an average annual gain of 6.1 percent over the past five years, outstripping the returns of about 90 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Gor says he is looking for opportunities to bet on a decline in the Australian dollar, though he predicts that it could climb toward 80 cents in the short-term. The median estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg is for a 6 percent drop to 71 by year-end.
“In a world which is searching for higher-yielding assets at the moment, I think Aussie bonds still look OK and the Aussie currency looks OK,” he said. “One or two-year view, I’d definitely be short. But on a two-week to three-month view, I don’t think I want to have a position on it right now.”
U.S. Criticism
Gor said a year ago that the RBA cash rate could drop as low as 1 percent and he still sees a risk of it falling below 1.5 percent. While Stevens has kept Australia’s benchmark unchanged since last May and expressed a disinclination to go lower, Gor sees the pressures of global “currency wars” forcing the governor’s hand as the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan take their benchmarks deeper below zero.
The decision by the U.S. Treasury to criticize the RBA’s commentary on the currency means that so-called jawboning might, at the margin, become a less appealing option for Stevens and that could add to the prospects for interest-rate cuts, Gor said.
“By not lowering interest rates, you hold the currency up higher than it ultimately would be,” said Gor. “I’m pretty sure the RBA would rather the currency wasn’t 10 percent overvalued.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Benjamin Purvis in Sydney at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells, Naoto Hosoda
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