The Reserve Bank of Australia's rate hike cycle is once again stirring waves. HSBC recently put forward a core judgment—don't rush to raise interest rates in February; wait until the third quarter. What's the logic behind this?
HSBC Chief Economist Paul Bloxham bluntly states: raising rates now would be very painful. Why? Inflation pressures seem fierce, but the real root cause isn't how hot the economy is, but on the supply side. Australia's productivity has long been weak, and with government spending continuously expanding, these two forces stacking up have caused the economy to hit capacity constraints prematurely. Data speaks: by Q3 2025, capacity utilization has surged to 83.6%, a 18-month high, approaching the critical threshold where "going faster would overheat."
What’s the problem? Data from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia shows that the potential economic growth rate is only around 2.1%. The non-market sectors are expanding, but mining productivity is declining. These two forces offset each other, and growth momentum is actually loosening. The benefits of AI and net-zero transition haven't fully materialized yet.
The reality is quite awkward: inflation definitely exists. Since July, the CPI has exceeded the RBA's 2%-3% target range for five consecutive months, reaching 3.8% in October. But at the same time, signals of economic growth are also weakening—December's composite PMI dropped to 51.1, a seven-month low, and the leading economic activity index is also declining.
This combination of "high inflation + weak growth" puts policymakers at a crossroads. Raising interest rates would hit already fragile growth, while not raising rates would let inflation continue to cause trouble. This is the current true picture of Australia.
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BlockchainFoodie
· 7h ago
ngl, this is literally like trying to proof-of-freshness on a soufflé that's already deflated... you can't just slap higher interest rates on it and expect it to rise again, right? the supply-side bottleneck thing actually checks out—it's the ingredient scarcity problem, not the recipe being too good. smart contract economics would flag this as a broken incentive structure fr fr
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LiquidityWitch
· 9h ago
stagflation's brewing in the antipodes... the real alchemy here isn't in the rate calls, it's watching central banks transmute policy into paralysis. rba's stuck between two cursed LP positions fr fr
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GasGrillMaster
· 9h ago
This stagflation situation really makes it impossible to play. Raising interest rates stifles growth, and not raising them allows inflation to eat away.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 9h ago
Australia, stagflation is coming, it's tough.
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token_therapist
· 9h ago
Once again, it's a dilemma of choosing between a rock and a hard place... Raising interest rates hurts growth, not raising rates fuels inflation, the Reserve Bank of Australia is really at its wit's end.
The Reserve Bank of Australia's rate hike cycle is once again stirring waves. HSBC recently put forward a core judgment—don't rush to raise interest rates in February; wait until the third quarter. What's the logic behind this?
HSBC Chief Economist Paul Bloxham bluntly states: raising rates now would be very painful. Why? Inflation pressures seem fierce, but the real root cause isn't how hot the economy is, but on the supply side. Australia's productivity has long been weak, and with government spending continuously expanding, these two forces stacking up have caused the economy to hit capacity constraints prematurely. Data speaks: by Q3 2025, capacity utilization has surged to 83.6%, a 18-month high, approaching the critical threshold where "going faster would overheat."
What’s the problem? Data from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia shows that the potential economic growth rate is only around 2.1%. The non-market sectors are expanding, but mining productivity is declining. These two forces offset each other, and growth momentum is actually loosening. The benefits of AI and net-zero transition haven't fully materialized yet.
The reality is quite awkward: inflation definitely exists. Since July, the CPI has exceeded the RBA's 2%-3% target range for five consecutive months, reaching 3.8% in October. But at the same time, signals of economic growth are also weakening—December's composite PMI dropped to 51.1, a seven-month low, and the leading economic activity index is also declining.
This combination of "high inflation + weak growth" puts policymakers at a crossroads. Raising interest rates would hit already fragile growth, while not raising rates would let inflation continue to cause trouble. This is the current true picture of Australia.