Inflation At Target And GDP Growth Recovery: A Comeback Case For The Australian Dollar

Board, Blackboard, Economy, Inflation, Money

Image Source: Pixabay

Over the past year, I’ve grown increasingly interested in the Australian dollar as a contrarian “value” currency trade against the U.S. dollar. I could of course be very wrong given the amount of economic chaos emanating from the U.S., but watching last week’s press conference on Australian monetary policy increased my confidence in the trade. In its latest monetary policy statement, Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Michele Bullock described an economy entering a recovery phase—with growth picking up and inflation stabilizing—after enduring a post-pandemic period marked by high interest rates and slowing economic growth.

Data Source: Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product
(Complete statistical tables available from the Australian Bureau of Statistics)

In cutting its cash rate for the second time during this easing cycle, Bullock called the move a “confident” cut. As the chart below demonstrates (Source: The Reserve Bank of Australia, Consumer Price Inflation – G1), Australia’s inflation has returned to pre-pandemic norms. Bullock described a broad-based slowing in price increases, leading to a forecast for “the underlying pulse of inflation around the midpoint of the 2 to 3 per cent range over the next year or so.” With that trend firmly in place, she concluded: “with inflation declining and the unemployment rate relatively low, we’re well positioned to deal with” the challenges presented by the U.S.’s trade war with the rest of the world.

(Full inflation data at Consumer Price Index, Australia)


Stable Inflation Enables Renewed Easing of Monetary Policy
 

The U.S.’s trade war threatens renewed inflation pressures through global supply chain disruptions. The RBA is monitoring these developments closely, forecasting “growth in our major trading partners slowing over the remainder of this year and next year.” At the same time, it has revised its domestic growth forecast expecting the economy to grow “a little more slowly,” and sees “global trade developments” as mostly deflationary—aside from inflationary supply shocks from the trade war. These factors underlie the RBA’s confidence in continuing the rate-cutting cycle.

The RBA has also been transparent about its easing bias. Bullock noted: “if we were just looking at where the domestic economy was at the moment, would we be looking at lowering rates or not, and as I said earlier with inflation in the band and also employment doing pretty well, we think there is a bit of scope to lower interest rates.” Even with labor market tightness, she added, “it does seem that inflation is continuing to come down notwithstanding a bit of tightness in the labour market.” Moreover, “inflation is right on target from a six-month annualised point of view.”

Looking ahead, the RBA sees conditional room for further easing: “I think if we continue to observe inflation coming down and staying down sustainably, then to the extent that we think there’s still restrictiveness in monetary policy—and we think there is a bit—then that would give us opportunities to lower the interest rate further.” However, Bullock acknowledged that renewed strength in consumer demand could change the equation: “If it looks like things pick up much more quickly than we thought they would… then all the cost pressures that the businesses are saying, well, they might be able to pass them on. That might be the risk on the upside, and the question there would be for us: are we still restrictive enough to keep that under control or do we need a bit more restrictiveness?”


Risks: A Fog of Unpredictability
 

Still, global and domestic risks remain. Bullock was frank about the external backdrop: “the situation we’re in is it’s not just uncertain, it’s actually unpredictable.” While the Federal Reserve has remained frozen—on high alert for stagflation—Australia is benefitting from a policy window (that may close in unpredictable ways).

Domestically, the RBA continues to monitor labor market imbalances. Bullock noted that “employment growth, the participation rate, vacancy rates, all these sorts of things are suggestive of the labour market still being quite tight.” On the other hand, consumption has not yet responded as expected to rising real incomes and falling rates: “We’ve been a little bit surprised that consumption hasn’t recovered as real incomes have started to recover. It’s just a bit softer than we thought it would be if you think about historical relationships. We thought it would have done better. So that’s the risk, that households for some reason are being much more cautious than they have been in the past and that that is a downside for the economy.”

The RBA has also shown intellectual flexibility in revisiting its assumptions: “we are open to the idea that we may be overestimating, or underestimating full employment, and I think that’s a healthy thing for us.”

Even amid these uncertainties, Australia’s anchored inflation and resilient labor conditions help reinforce the Australian dollar’s appeal as a mispriced asset in a volatile global landscape.


Trade Shocks: The Global Wildcard
 

Although Australia has a handle on its domestic picture, external shocks remain a major variable. Bullock acknowledged that the RBA, “just like everyone else, was completely blown out of the water by the scale and the scope” of the U.S.’s trade war. “So we really had to go back and have a much harder look. So there has been a lot of analysis done… and the Board does have to consider and factor much more of this into their thinking than was the case back before this all happened.”

While the RBA braces for future trade war storms, the U.S. Federal Reserve is in the center of the storm. The Fed is bracing for staglfationary impacts from the trade war and, as a result, remains stuck with inaction even as current inflation falls further from the Fed’s policy rate. Australia, by contrast, enjoys the flexibility of acting on current data and trends.



Conclusion: A Value Currency with Upside
 

Australia is entering a policy sweet spot: inflation is within target, the labor market remains robust, and GDP growth is beginning to recover. The country’s policy flexibility and economic trajectory stand in contrast to that of the U.S., where a hawkish Fed is constrained by future inflation expectations and geopolitical risk.

From a currency trading perspective, the Australian dollar looks as a value currency—undervalued after years of economic drag and monetary tightening…even with concerns about Chinese growth.

The following weekly chart of Invesco CurrencyShares Australian Dollar Trust (FXA) (currency pair AUD/USD) shows 14-year pressure on the Australian dollar versus the U.S. dollar. Assuming the pandemic lows hold, the time looks ripe for a sustained turnaround.

Be careful out there!


More By This Author:

Powell’s (Not So) Hidden Plea To End The U.S.’s Tariff War
An Early Look At Stagflationary Pressures
Inflation Concerns Rise At The Federal Reserve Amid Tariff Unease

Disclosure: long AUD/USD, AUD/JPY

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