Monetary Policy in 24 November Benchmark Reforms 17 November Statement on Monetary Policy — November 6 November Today's Monetary Policy Decision 3 November Index of Commodity Prices — October 2 November Financial Aggregates — September 30 October Financial Stability in Uncertain Times 27 October Financial Stability Review 9 October Bulletin — September Quarter 17 September How Risky is Australian Household Debt?
The Economic Outlook 7 August Statement on Monetary Policy — August 7 August Index of Commodity Prices — July 4 August Financial Aggregates — June 31 July Bulletin — June Quarter 18 June Panic, Pandemic and Payment Preferences 3 June Financial Aggregates — April 29 May Statement on Monetary Policy — May 8 May Index of Commodity Prices — April 1 May An Economic and Financial Update 21 April Release of Term Funding Facility operational notes and application procedure 31 March Bulletin — March Quarter 19 March Skills, Technology and the Future of Work 16 March The Virus and the Australian Economy 11 March Index of Commodity Prices — February 2 March Financial Aggregates — January 28 February Statement on Monetary Policy — February 7 February The Year Ahead 5 February However, he said the RBA's decision to abandon yield curve control was due to "improvement in the economy" and the "earlier-than-expected progress towards the inflation target" 2 to 3 per cent.
Dr Lowe has repeatedly said: "The [RBA] Board will not increase the cash rate until actual inflation is sustainably within the 2 to 3 per cent target range. This is likely to take some time. In previous statements, the governor consistently said rates are unlikely to be lifted "before ". He did not make that reassurance this time. However, Dr Lowe attempted to play down rate hike speculation by emphasising that Australians are unlikely to see meaningful pay rises for some time.
The Australian dollar fell to We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work. Key points: The central bank has abandoned its efforts to achieve "yield curve control" It involved the RBA buying three-year government bonds to artificially lower their yields A sharp rise in inflation contributed to the RBA's decision to wind back COVID stimulus.
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Here are some more. Queen Elizabeth sprains her back and misses Remembrance Sunday service. Liberal backbenchers call for more ambitious emission reduction target. The drop came after the RBA said it would abandon its yield curve control policy which targeted that particular bond.
The five-year government bond yield fell 0. There was also action in the bank bill futures with the March implied yield down to 0. The June contract edged lower to 0. The Australian dollar slipped to US It peaked to a four-month high of US Skip to navigation Skip to content Skip to footer Help using this website - Accessibility statement.
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