Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Rate pause gifted for Christmas
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
Search
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
Redland Bayside News > Real Estate > Rate pause gifted for Christmas
Real Estate

Rate pause gifted for Christmas

Redland Bayside News
Redland Bayside News
Published: December 14, 2023
Share
3 Min Read
Rate pause gifted for Christmas
SHARE

BORROWERS have been spared more cash rate pain at the final Reserve Bank of Australia policy meeting of the year.

Australian mortgage holders have been gifted an early Christmas present as the Reserve Bank chooses to leave interest rates untouched.

The board has decided to leave the cash rate at 4.35% at the December meeting in a move most forecasters saw coming.

The pause follows 425 basis points of increases to the cash rate since May last year that has pushed repayments up steeply for variable-rate mortgage holders.

- Advertisement -

Higher interest rates are aimed at bringing down inflation, which has been moderating but remains well below the 2–3% target range.

The December call followed a month of softer data, including a slowdown in the monthly inflation gauge to 4.9% in October, from 5.6% in September.

A weaker retail sales report suggests consumers are cautious and cracks are starting to appear in the labour market.

In a post-meeting statement, RBA governor Michele Bullock again left the door open to more tightening in phrasing recycled from the month before.

“Whether further tightening of monetary policy is required… will depend upon the data and the evolving assessment of risks,” Ms Bullock said.

Upcoming decisions remain data dependent, with the RBA to keep a close eye on “developments in the global economy, trends in domestic demand.

‘‘And the outlook for inflation and the labour market”.

KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne said the central bank appeared ready to react to new economic data.

In particular, the evolution of the home-grown component of inflation.

The central bank governor has repeatedly warned inflation now has a domestic element to it.

Thi is as well as supply side drivers – which means interest rates are effective at bringing it down.

Dr Rynne said more rate rises could not be ruled out but KPMG’s central case was more tightening was probably unnecessary.

“Price momentum is heading in the right direction,” he said.

Deloitte Access Economics partner Stephen Smith said demand-side price pressures were “part of the story: “but the supply side remained the key source of inflation.

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Latest Real Estate News

BREATHING SPACE: For now, mortgage holders can take some comfort from the numbers,
Inflation drop lowers fears around rate hike
Real Estate
KEY REFORMS: The changes are designed to increase the flow of capital into residential development.
Open for business: Red tape cut to boost state’s housing supply
Real Estate
GETTING BUSY: New listings are coming on, buyers are active and competition will be strong.
Market pause ends as competition ramps up
Real Estate
Alexandra Hills named among Brisbane’s best suburbs for first-home buyers in 2026
Community Featured News Real Estate

You Might Also Like

Sun goes down on sunset clause
Real Estate

Sun goes down on sunset clause

August 31, 2023
CRISAFULLI CALL: The REIQ wants the new premier to honour its pledge of one million homes by 2044.
Real Estate

Low vacancy rates ‘new normal’

November 7, 2024
Your Redlands market update
Real Estate

Your Redlands market update

June 30, 2024
Championing community and real estate in the Redlands
Real Estate

Championing community and real estate in the Redlands

March 27, 2025
Copyright © 2026 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?