Interest rate decisions are driven by multiple economic indicators, and a single data point (like employment figures) can significantly alter market expectations. The Reserve Bank of Australia's rate decisions depend on core inflation (trimmed mean CPI), which strips out volatile items like fuel prices, rather than headline inflation. When unemployment rises and core inflation remains elevated, the central bank may continue hiking rates even if headline inflation appears lower. Investors should focus on cycle signals—understanding where the economy sits in the hiking cycle and what indicators will trigger the next rate change—rather than gambling on whether rates will rise or fall.
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Australia's Next Interest Rate Shock Is Hiding in Plain Sight|APS154Added:
A month ago, the market was betting that the Reserve Bank of Australia would hike rates again in June. That bet has completely fallen apart. All four of Australia's biggest banks, CBA, Westpak, NAB, and A&Z are now calling the same thing. June the 16th, no change, and the market agrees, pricing in a [snorts] high chance of a hold. Sounds like a done deal, right? It's not because two things should keep you up at night.
First, Westpack changed its prediction.
What did they see that made it back off?
And [snorts] second, June isn't the date that matters. August is. Whether your mortgage rate goes higher comes down to a single number. Hi, I'm Alex and welcome to Ow Property Strategy where breakdown real estate investment strategies, key economic trends, and proven paths to wealth creation. If you're finding this helpful, go ahead and smash that subscribe button, turn on the notification bell, and catch our new videos every week. Without further ado, let's jump right in.
Two sets of numbers came out [music] in May and they turned the whole conversation on its head. First up, let's talk about jobs. On May the 21st, the ABS dropped the April employment report and the numbers were ugly.
Unemployment jumped to 4.5%, the highest reading since November 2021, a 4 and a halfyear high. The economy shed close to 20,000 jobs in a single month, the first decline in 5 months, and youth unemployment shot up to 11.1%. That's more than one in 10 young Australians out of work. Now, here's how much that number mattered. On the same day it landed, NAB, one of the big four, ripped up its June hike forecast and pushed it to August. A single data released made a top tier bank flip its call within hours. That tells you everything about how sensitive the situation is right now. Here's how to think about it.
Hiking rates is the RBA's way of slamming the brakes on economy that's running too hot. But when the labor market starts cooling off on its own, the RBA doesn't need to step on the brakes again. The engine's already losing speed. You might be sitting there thinking, "My job is fine. This doesn't affect me." But think again. When a bank looks at your loan application, it's not just looking at you. It's looking at the whole employment picture behind you.
That picture is getting shakier. And when it does, banks tighten up. Your pay hasn't changed. Your savings haven't changed. And the amount you can actually borrow could be quietly shrinking because the bank sees a shaky economy and it prices that in. Right now, our serviceability buffer is still sitting at 3%. In plain English, when a bank tests whether you can handle a loan, it takes the actual mortgage rate and adds 3% on top. With rates at 6.3%, the test rate is 9.3%. your repayments get stress tested at that level. Now, think about what happens if the RBA pushes the cash rate to 4.6% in August. That test rate climbs with it. The slice of borrowing power you lose to a single rate hike might only be 20,000 or 30,000, but that can be the exact gap between affording the property you want and missing it.
Now, let's talk about the other number, inflation. On May the 28th, the ABS reported that April headline CPI dropped from 4.6% 6% to 4.2, beating the market's expectation of 4.4%. On the surface, that's great news. Inflation coming down plus unemployment going up gave the RBA plenty of room to sit on its hands in June. But here's the thing.
While all four banks agree on a June pause, when you look at what they're saying about August, the picture cracks wide open. So, what pushes that 4.2% number up? The answer is few excise. The government slashed few excise in half at the end of March, dropping more than 26 cents off every liter. Petrol prices dropped 7% in April alone and that pulled the whole CPI reading lower. But this is a temporary fix. On June the 1st, few excise comes back. When that happens, headline inflation in the second half is almost certain to bounce back by.3 to 5%. I'm not saying the sky is falling. I'm saying the June number looks calmer than reality actually is.
and the second half of the year tells a very different story.
All right, so all four banks say hold in June. Everyone's getting along, but look past June into the second half of the year and you'll [music] see two camps that could not be further apart. Let's start with the Dolves, the ones who think the hiking cycle is done. CBA, the Commonwealth Bank, Australia's biggest lender, believes 4.35% is the ceiling.
Their view is we're now in a long hold and red cuts won't show up until 2027 at the earliest. A&Z is in the same boat.
These two banks are basically saying the war is over. Then there's the hawks.
NAB, the bank that tore up its forecast the day the jobs data came out, still thinks the RBA will hike once more in August, taking the cash rate to 4.6% and then hold. And then there's Westpak.
Westpak is the most aggressive of the lot. It's calling for hikes in both August and September, pushing rates all the way up to 4.85% with no cuts on the table until 2028. The logic from their chief economist Luci Alis is clear and honestly it's hard to dismiss. Core inflation the trim mean is still trending upward and once few excise comes back in July that pressure builds even further. But now here's the part most people miss. The headline CPI we just talked about fell from 4.6% to 4.2%. But CPI is jumpy. Oil prices move and CPI follows. The trimmed mean CPI strips out the volatile stuff and shows you what's really going on underneath.
That's the number the RBA actually bases its decisions on. And it went from 3.3% up to 3.4%. That means the ripple effects of higher fuel costs are already spreading through the broader economy.
So stop and think about this for a second. Four of Australia's biggest banks are all looking at the exact same data and their conclusions range from it's over all the way to two more hikes are coming. If you feel lost trying to figure out where rates are heading, join the club. They can't agree either. Who's right and who's wrong? August will sort it out. Banks use models to come up with these numbers. But there's another group putting real money where their mouth is.
And let's see what they're betting.
Before we keep going, if anything in today's video has you thinking about your own situation, there are two ways to get real answers. A free 15-minute call with one of our property investment strategists. Brand new questions, get a straight answer, no strengths. Or if you want the full done for you path, strategy, lending, property selection, portfolio, text structure, wealth planning, all of it. Book a free 30inut discovery session and see how Vision Gold membership actually works. Both links are in the description. All right, let's get back to it.
There's a tool called ASX RBA rate tracker and it works like this. Traders buy and sell contracts called 30-day cash rate futures. The price of those contracts reflects how likely they think a rate change is and ASX [music] converts that price into a probability.
So, this isn't someone's opinion. This is money talking and money tends to be honest. As of May the 28th, the market was giving Jun a 100% chance of a hold.
But here's where it gets interesting.
Before the April unemployment data came out, the market was still giving a 13% chance of a June hike. The second that data landed, the probability vanished and the market's current bet is that the cash rate will end 2026 at 4.6%. That means the market sees one more high coming in the second half. So, you've got banks running their models. The market putting down real cash and both are pointing at the same conclusion.
June will be a hold, but August is still very much alive.
A lot of people are going to hear big four plus the market all agree no June hike and jump straight to the conclusion rates have peaked cuts are right around the corner. That would [music] be a mistake. No hike in June does not mean the top is in. The market's own year-end pricing of 4.60% has another hike baked right into it. Core inflation the trim do the mean isn't just sitting still, it's climbing. In April it hit 3.4% the highest since September 2024. On top of that, fuel excise comes back in July, so inflation pressure in the second half is more likely to go up than down. The real game is in August, and there are four signals you should be watching closely.
First, keep your eyes on the Q2 core inflation data. The quarterly CPI numbers come out at the end of July, right before the August meeting. If the trimmed mean keeps climbing and pushes through 3.5%, an August hike is practically a done deal. The RBA's own forecast has Q2 hitting 3.8%. 8% and if that number lands a hike is for sure.
Second, watch oil prices. Brent crude was sitting around $91 at the end of May, partly on the back of US Iran ceasefire talks, but that ceasefire hasn't been signed yet. If Brent pushes back above $100 and holds there for two weeks or more, the hawk's case for another hike gets a whole lot stronger.
Third, there's the few excise snapback on July the 1st. This is the biggest inflation time bomb ticking in the second half of the year, and I'm not being dramatic about it. Fourth, pay close attention to the meeting minutes coming out on June the 17th. More important than the rate decision itself is the language the RBA uses about August. Read the minutes. The wording tells you more than the outcome. At OS Property Strategy, when we build investment plans for our vision gold members, we follow one core principle.
Don't gamble on whether rates go up or down. Follow the cycle signals. That means reading where the RBA sits in the hiking cycle, what stage the economy is at, and then making your move. Right now, rates are high and choppy, and the direction isn't clear yet. You shouldn't be making a one-way bet. When you're picking a city and timing your entry, interest rates are always a key factor.
And right now, that factor is pointing straight at uncertainty. June will probably be a hold, but the door for August is still wide open. In a window like this, the timing of your entry carries more weight than usual. I'm not saying try to pick the exact bottom. I'm saying you need to know how many bullets you've got left and how far they'll reach. The way I see it, there are two things worth doing right now. First, go back and recalculate your borrowing power. It's not a fixed number. Every 0.25% rate move shifts your maximum loan amount on an 800,000 loan. If August brings another hike, the amount you can borrow today could drop to 770,000.
That 30,000 gap doesn't sound like much, but it can be the difference between reaching the property you want and watching someone else buy it. Second, if you're planning to buy within the next 6 months, go and get a pre-approval now, locking the current assessment criteria while they're still the same. As soon as the rate decision drops, I'll put out an instant breakdown video covering what it means for mortgage holders for people getting ready to buy. And I'll update my call on where August is heading. If you want to catch it first, subscribe and hit the bell. And if you're tired of trying to guess rates and timing on your own, and you'd rather have a professional team help you work out your boring capacity and your buying window, Vision Gold membership could be the starting point you need. The link is in the description below. If you've made it this far, hit like and subscribe and share this with someone who needs to see it. O Property Strategy helping you build wealth through Australian property. I'm Alex. I'll see you in the next one. Bye.
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