Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 26 results for "May board meeting" |
| | | ... and further growth in public demand and business investment. "Recent government policies announced after the May board meeting to mechanically lower headline CPI should contribute to anchoring inflation expectations," Allen said. "Also helping will be ... |
| | | | ... 4.2% and inflation rose close to the centre of the 2-3% range for the first time in years. At the most recent May board meeting, the economy looked even stronger than had been forecast in the months prior; unemployment declined to extremely low levels ... |
| | | | ... even decide to loosen its budget spending. And then, there's the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA). At its May Board meeting, it hinted that it could start tapering its bond purchases in July. This now, to a certain extent, hinges on developments in ... |
| | | | ... existing LSAP programme, and retained the existing Funding for Lending Programme (FLP) conditions at its 26 May Board meeting. Same old, same old. The central bank notes that: "The improvement in global and domestic economic indicators... have provided ... |
| | | | ... Understandably, another interest rate reduction only a month after it handed out a 25 basis point cut at its May board meeting could be counter-productive, indicating a sense of urgency (if not, panic) on the domestic economic outlook. Then again, the ... |
| | | | ... Monetary Policy' - delivered to the Economic Society of Australia on May 21 concluded with a reference to the May board meeting and the RBA's thinking going into June deliberations. "At that meeting, we discussed a scenario in which there was ... |
| | | | ... Australia's employment report has become a focal point for the RBA and the financial markets. It told us so at its May board meeting, stating: "The board will be paying close attention to developments in the labour market at its upcoming meetings." ... |
| | | | ... heading farther away from the RBA's inflation target. Then again, and as the RBA statement indicated at its May board meeting, the Australian central bank's bias is tilted towards the relatively low unemployment rate than below-target inflation ... |
| | | | Nothing. Nada. Zilch. Despite high expectations that it would leading up to its May Board meeting, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) didn't only NOT cut the official cash rate - it kept it unchanged at a record low 1.5% - it also maintained its ... |
| | | | "In the current circumstances, members agreed that it was more likely that the next move in the cash rate would be up, rather than down." Reserve Bank of Australia governor Philip Lowe declared this in many of his recent speeches, the statement was ... |
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