Australian dollar falls

The Australian dollar has fallen Monday, buying 69.28 US cents from 68.92 US cents on Friday.

Last Friday, the local currency fell and bond yields slipped to all-time lows after Westpac predicted rates will be cut three times this year, more than the market’s view for two easings.

Westpac Banking Corp chief economist Bill Evans – who carries tremendous credibility in the forex market for getting his calls right – sees policy easings in June, August and November.

The Australian dollar fell 0.3 percentage points to as low as 68.80 US cents on Friday, drifting towards a 4 1/2-month trough of 68.62 touched on Thursday.

Expectations of more aggressive easing sent yields on three-year bonds to 1.091 per cent, while those on the 10-year paper skidded to 1.519 per cent, also the lowest ever.

Interest rate futures are almost fully pricing in one cut at the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) June 4 meeting following guidance from Governor Philip Lowe earlier this week.

A second easing is seen in October.

Economists polled by Reuters this week predicted two cuts this year – June followed by August.

A cut would be the first in three years after the RBA held policy at an all-time low 1.50 per cent since last easing in August 2016.

“Our forecasts for employment, wages growth, economic growth, inflation and conditions in the housing market are consistent with the need for policy to ease through the full course of 2019, not to go on hold as early as August,” Westpac’s Evans said in a note.

“We see the unemployment rate drifting up to 5.4 per cent by year’s end, economic growth at 2.2 per cent for 2019, underlying inflation at 1.4 per cent, and the housing market still weak although approaching stability.

“That means that the June and August cuts should be supported by a further cut in November.”

Australia’s jobless rate has climbed to 5.2 per cent after hitting a decade low of 4.9 per cent in February, gross domestic product growth likely braked to the slowest since the global financial crisis last quarter while inflation has undershot the RBA’s 2-3 per cent target band for 13 quarters in a row.

The dour outlook has generally led economists and financial markets to expect a stimulatory policy for a long time to come.

“We believe the RBA will at least need to communicate a dovish policy stance well into the future but may need to cut further,” Citi economist Josh Williamson said in a note.

Governor Lowe, however, is optimistic about a turnaround led by expectations of income tax cuts for millions of Australian households and government spending on infrastructure.

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