Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

RBA meeting 5-2-08 and interest rates

What's the likely outcome for tomorrow's RBA meeting on interest rates?

  • Down

    Votes: 3 4.5%
  • Hold

    Votes: 9 13.6%
  • Up 25bps

    Votes: 41 62.1%
  • Up 50bps

    Votes: 8 12.1%
  • Up 75 bps

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Up other

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I don't know. I'm just addicted to voting in online polls

    Votes: 5 7.6%

  • Total voters
    66
RBA is weak, rise it by 0.75 if they really want to contain inflation.

If you put a frog in a bow of water and slowly adjust the temperature up, it will die in the bowl.

If you put a frog in a hot pot of water it jump out and survive.

This 0.25 rise for the last 11 times will slowly kill Australia.
and by the time they realize it we are in recession.

The moral of the story is rise it slowly people learn to adjust even though they cant afford it.
But there is so much adjusting they can do and at some point it will break them. (bankrupt)

Rise it hard and fast, people who cant afford the payment will jump out and survive and savage what they can.
 
Good time to give up smoking, reduce number of trips to play pokies, substitute $30 a bottle of wine with $15 cask, walk more, eat less out, plant some vegies even in a container on the window sill (maybe we should dig up the garden thread), do more ourselves to save on repairs, start making gifts for next X-mass or maybe even drop religion not to have to worry about that bit.

This way we can accommodate even few more 0.25% jumps.
 
If you put a frog in a bow of water and slowly adjust the temperature up, it will die in the bowl.

If you put a frog in a hot pot of water it jump out and survive.

Let the intelligent forum posters here become part of the movement to put this urban myth in the ground where it belongs. Wonder how many hapless frogs have suffered through people attempting to test it? :nono:

http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/frogboil.asp
 
Is there an option to continuing to increase interest rates?
It simply isn't working. Inflation continues to rise unabated.

Doesn't the continued rate rise just affect people with mortgages - I think about a third of the population -(and I guess businesses), while actually benefiting those of us who have cash to invest? With the ongoing big spend up in Australia, it seems not too many are actually inhibited in their spending by the rate cuts.

And then there's all those billions in tax cuts to further fuel inflation still to come.
 
Good time to give up smoking, reduce number of trips to play pokies, substitute $30 a bottle of wine with $15 cask, walk more, eat less out, plant some vegies even in a container on the window sill (maybe we should dig up the garden thread), do more ourselves to save on repairs, start making gifts for next X-mass or maybe even drop religion not to have to worry about that bit.

This way we can accommodate even few more 0.25% jumps.

Then you would be putting little, struggling retail businesses like us out of business :(
 
Irrespectively of what I have written, it always happens that people reduce other expenses before they give up on mortgage repayments.
 
One aspect of this that I don't understand, with all the money leaving the stock market, the amount of superannuation being collected each week and the increased interest on savings currently in banks, how are the banks going to afford the interest on savings. Lots of money must be going back into the banks. We are told to cut credit card spending and we know that home loans are down excluding refinancing so that will make things more difficult.

A few of my friends have rung their advisors and reajusted their superannuation to include more cash, won't money from America also come in? I just can't understand it how it can work how can the banks afford to keep interest rates up.
 
Well gee, I just checked the RBA's M3 figure which was running at 16% last year.

Now I wonder where all that inflation they perport to be fighting is coming from...
 
Rate rise pushes Aussies to 'verge of crisis'
Tuesday Feb 5 15:00 AEDT
By Sean Cusick
ninemsn

The interest rate rise will push many Australian homeowners to breaking point, according to consumer debt services.

"We are very frightened for our clients," Consumer Credit Legal Centre coordinator Karen Cox says.

"We are on the verge of a crisis.

A government-funded financial counselling service, the CCLC has been flooded with calls from people claiming to be drowning in debt.

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=375566

Ahh debt the root of all evil, if the Consumer Credit Legal Centre is being flooded already, imagine after this rate rise flows through and the other one thatll probably arrive next month.

Something is going to break I can feel it in my loins :eek:

I think the PM should go on TV and spell it out in no uncertain terms that Inflation is sky high and rates WILL keep rising, people sit there hoping for the best with absolutely no Idea, like sheep to the slaughter.

Dark clouds are massing I fear.
 
As widely rejected, the Reserve Bank of Australia lifted its cash rate target by 25bp to an eleven-year high of 7.00% (which means the banks will stick em for 9% as soon as they find their rock proof suits }in an effort to keep the grin off inflationary pressures. With the labour market remaining in China and India and much of the economy posting firm growth, the central bank is worried that a wage-price spiral might get underway as underlying inflation moves stubbornly above its 2- 3% target band at least until 2099. Capacity constraints and a shortage of skilled labour, combined with the global trends of rising food and energy prices (exacerbated by massive beer and lolly water drinkingin Australia by the extended drought), suggest that price pressures will remain firm without some easing in the pace of activity. Indeed, the RBA noted that a 'significant slowing in demand' may be needed to push inflation lower over time and decided to drink all the wine this time round instead . Slower global growth alone will not be enough to curb Australia's economy as the commodities boom looks set to continue regardless. The hawkish tone of the statement suggests that the risks to interest rates remain to the upsideand if we don't like it , practice more drinking


Couldn't resist :D
 
Something is going to break I can feel it in my loins :eek:

I think the PM should go on TV and spell it out in no uncertain terms that Inflation is sky high and rates WILL keep rising, people sit there hoping for the best with absolutely no Idea, like sheep to the slaughter.

Dark clouds are massing I fear.

over dow jones a little whiles back (an hour or so)

Latest Rate Hike Will Really Hurt .. Kevin Rudd
 
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=375566

Ahh debt the root of all evil, if the Consumer Credit Legal Centre is being flooded already, imagine after this rate rise flows through and the other one thatll probably arrive next month.

Something is going to break I can feel it in my loins :eek:

I think the PM should go on TV and spell it out in no uncertain terms that Inflation is sky high and rates WILL keep rising, people sit there hoping for the best with absolutely no Idea, like sheep to the slaughter.

Dark clouds are massing I fear.

Maybe another Recession the Reserve Bank say's we have to have....
 
One aspect of this that I don't understand, with all the money leaving the stock market, the amount of superannuation being collected each week and the increased interest on savings currently in banks, how are the banks going to afford the interest on savings. Lots of money must be going back into the banks. We are told to cut credit card spending and we know that home loans are down excluding refinancing so that will make things more difficult.

A few of my friends have rung their advisors and reajusted their superannuation to include more cash, won't money from America also come in? I just can't understand it how it can work how can the banks afford to keep interest rates up.

back in the seventies when inflation was at about the same as now ie becomming noticed and causing concern amoung the masses who had enjoyed many low inflation years I proffered to a businessman that inflation "could not keep rising at the current rate"
his response was - get used to it and adjust because it will
he was right, I was wrong, but he did change my attitude long before that conclusion was obvious
 
Good time to give up smoking, reduce number of trips to play pokies, substitute $30 a bottle of wine with $15 cask, walk more, eat less out, plant some vegies even in a container on the window sill (maybe we should dig up the garden thread), do more ourselves to save on repairs, start making gifts for next X-mass or maybe even drop religion not to have to worry about that bit.

This way we can accommodate even few more 0.25% jumps.

good points there happy - 10% tithing saving alone will cover things up to 17% interest
 
I recall in the 80's when I had 2 residential properties one 50% geared and the other 90%. At that time interest charges peaked @ 17%
While there was a need to show some spending restraint but I did not need to sell a kidney or start farming the backyard to survive. In all of the current discussions there seems to be a fairly comprehensive underestimation of the proven ability of the world to adapt to it's prevailing circumstances.
Will there be some people or businesses marginalised or seriously impacted, sure, regretably that's always the case, but let's not fall for the daily newspaper/TV reports and photos of melacholy looking couples with 2.1 kids living in Struggleville. You can find them any day of the week.
Rampant inflation is not anyones prefered option and neither is a market crash but is +0.25% the end of the world, give me a break.
 
I recall in the 80's when I had 2 residential properties one 50% geared and the other 90%. At that time interest charges peaked @ 17%
While there was a need to show some spending restraint but I did not need to sell a kidney or start farming the backyard to survive. In all of the current discussions there seems to be a fairly comprehensive underestimation of the proven ability of the world to adapt to it's prevailing circumstances.
Will there be some people or businesses marginalised or seriously impacted, sure, regretably that's always the case, but let's not fall for the daily newspaper/TV reports and photos of melacholy looking couples with 2.1 kids living in Struggleville. You can find them any day of the week.
Rampant inflation is not anyones prefered option and neither is a market crash but is +0.25% the end of the world, give me a break.

Don't forget, prices are set at the margins. It's those people who have massive influence, collectively.
 
The new government should introduce variable superannuation contributions as part of monetary policy.

Official interest rates are a blunt instrument. Not everyone has a loan. Higher interest rates add to wage and price pressures.

I'd like to see a “Superannuation Buffer” of say 2% of earnings. 9% Superannuation Guarantee (SG) + 2% Superannuation Buffer (SB) = 11% total. In periods of rising inflation, direct the full 2% SB into superannuation, to be treated the same as SG. Employees’ incomes drop slightly, with a corresponding reduction in spending. In “neutral” periods, direct 1% into super and the other 1% into normal earnings. In periods of slower growth / lower inflation, direct the full 2% into normal earnings to boost spending and economic activity.

The Super Buffer would facilitate quick changes in the level of spending in the economy. It would “share the pain” because it would affect more people than changes in interest rates. And it would be a “sellable” change; when, say, the full 2% SB is directed into superannuation, employees will see that it’s still their money (they just can’t spend it!)
 
The new government should introduce variable superannuation contributions as part of monetary policy.

Official interest rates are a blunt instrument. Not everyone has a loan. Higher interest rates add to wage and price pressures.

I'd like to see a “Superannuation Buffer” of say 2% of earnings. 9% Superannuation Guarantee (SG) + 2% Superannuation Buffer (SB) = 11% total. In periods of rising inflation, direct the full 2% SB into superannuation, to be treated the same as SG. Employees’ incomes drop slightly, with a corresponding reduction in spending. In “neutral” periods, direct 1% into super and the other 1% into normal earnings. In periods of slower growth / lower inflation, direct the full 2% into normal earnings to boost spending and economic activity.

The Super Buffer would facilitate quick changes in the level of spending in the economy. It would “share the pain” because it would affect more people than changes in interest rates. And it would be a “sellable” change; when, say, the full 2% SB is directed into superannuation, employees will see that it’s still their money (they just can’t spend it!)

The thing is (presuming that savings interest rates reflect official rates) unless you are willing to screw over savers, interest rates must represent a premium to the inflation rate lest people saving are completely debased.

Also, if in periods of high inflation the 2% buffer is directed into super, this money will go directly to inflating asset prices and encouraging malinvestment... precisely the wrong thing in a high inflation environment.

:2twocents
 
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