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RBA cuts the cash rate

The official cash rate has been cut by the central bank for the first time since August 2016. 

The RBA board has decided to lower the cash rate to a new record low of 1.25 per cent, shocking most industry pundits.

None of the surveyed respondents on finder.com.au’s panel of industry experts predicted a rate change, while over 95 per cent of brokers surveyed by HashChing expect to see a hold, down from 98 per cent last month.

The last time the cash rate moved was in August 2016, when it dropped to its former level of 1.50 per cent and was held at that rate for 21 consecutive rate announcements (or 22 consecutive months, seeing as there is no cash rate announcement in January).

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CoreLogic’s head of research Tim Lawless predicted a hold but changed his stance from last month, predicting a rate hike in November 2019 as opposed to October. For Mr Lawless, a fall was not considered.

 “Economic conditions remain reasonably stable, housing market growth continues to slow, household debt is at record highs, and inflation remains around the lower end of the RBA target range. With this scenario as a backdrop, the hold decision today from the RBA was widely anticipated,” Mr Lawless said.

By and large, finder.com.au’s panel overwhelmingly stated the conditions are just not in place yet to see a rate change.

Nerida Conisbee from REA Group said that while businesses are confident in the current economy, consumers are not.

“Until this turns around, I think it is unlikely we will see an interest rate rise,” Ms Conisbee said.

Leanne Pilkington believed the decision to hold was appropriate for the current economic climate.

“Global economic forces, the widening wage gap between older and younger working Australians, and outcomes of the banking royal commission might all impact the RBA’s outlook in the near term, but for now it’s important that interest rates remain steady,” Ms Pilkington said.

Like Ms Pilkinston Capital Economics’ Paul Dales claimed the RBA was more concerned about the results of the royal commission, as well as the conditions of the current global trade dispute.

“There are still very few signs that inflation is going to rise back to the middle of the RBA's 2 [to] 3 per cent target,” Mr Dales said.

Despite a steady cash rate, John Kolenda, managing director at 1300HomeLoan, said mortgage holders are experiencing out of cycle rate increases from many lenders due to funding pressures and regulatory requirements, which means trying to borrow is going to become even harder.

 “Borrowing capacity for consumers has dropped up to 30 per cent over the past quarter and the borrowing parameters vary by lender, making it very challenging for borrowers to understand how much they can borrow and from whom,” Mr Kolenda said.

“Cost of funding issues has forced some lenders to increase the rates of some home loan products by more than 30 basis points, while other lenders play a wait and see game under the spot light of the Hayne Royal Commission, but they have the same pressure to increase rates out of cycle.”

[Related: Analysis: Has the RBA cash rate become irrelevant?]

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