The RBA SHOULD NOT Lower Its Inflation Target

 | Aug 17, 2018 13:52

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Investment markets and key developments over the past week/h2

  • Share markets had a bit of a messy ride over the last week – first falling on worries about Turkey and then bouncing back to varying degrees on news of new US/China trade talks. This saw Australian and US shares up, Japanese shares flat but Eurozone and Chinese shares down. Bond yields were little changed although they are back above 3% in Italy as Italian budget negotiations come into focus. Commodity prices fell further not helped by ongoing US dollar strength on the back of Turkish worries and this also contributed to further fall in the Australian dollar.
  • Worries about contagion from the Turkish crisis remain. Turkey got into this mess largely thanks to populist “growth at any cost policies” and its leader’s populist rejection of higher interest rates and an international bailout (for now) and refusal to make up with the US is helping perpetuate it. Financial assistance from Qatar will help but is unlikely to be enough. While Eurozone bank exposures to Turkey aren’t big enough to cause a major problem (they are mostly small relative to balance sheets and are likely to have been hedged) and global trade exposure to Turkey isn’t big enough either to cause a major problem and most other emerging markets are in far better shape both economically and politically, financial contagion remains a risk for emerging markets – with Brazil and South Africa most at risk. After a 14% fall, emerging market shares are now quite cheap (with an average forward PE of 11 times), but they are likely to remain under pressure until contagion fears from vulnerable EMs (notably Turkey at present) stop, the $US stops rising, uncertainty regarding Chinese growth fades and the trade war threat ends. Speaking of which…
  • …at last some good news on the US/China trade front with China sending a delegation to the US at the end of this month for renewed trade talks at the invitation of the US. Investors would be wise to be sceptical as to whether anything can be achieved quickly enough to head off US tariffs on another $US200bn of imports from China next month given that the May agreement was quickly trashed by Trump, that these negotiations are occurring at a low level officially and that both sides have dug in. Then again as we saw with Europe you never know, and most commentators seem to be sceptical of any break through and its in both sides interest to find a negotiated solution.
  • While we remain of the view that the conditions are not in place for a major bear market, we are now coming into the seasonally weak August-October period for shares and there are a lot of uncertainties around (Turkey/emerging markets, trade war threats, the Italian budget negotiations, ongoing Fed rate hikes, the Mueller inquiry and the US mid-term elections) all of which have the potential to trigger volatility and weakness in the next few months. This will likely impact both global and Australian shares.
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