|
Tuesday 15th July 2008 |
Text too small? |
"While members remained concerned about the current rate of inflation and the uncertainties about the outlook, the increasing signs that demand was slowing suggested that the existing policy setting was exerting the appropriate degree of restraint," according to minutes of the meeting, posted on the Reserve Bank of Australia's website today.
Inflation in Australia sped to 4.2% in the first quarter from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 17 years, as the economy expanded 0.6%, more than some economists had expected. The central bank's decision to keep rates unchanged this month may help underpin growth in New Zealand's largest export market.
RBA Governor Glenn Stevens signaled he was prepared to raise borrowing costs again unless economic growth cooled enough to slow inflation, when he kept the overnight cash rate at 7.25%.
Shipments to Australia rose 23% to NZ$8.8 billion in the 12 months ended May 31, accounting for about 22% of total merchandise exports, according to New Zealand government figures.
No comments yet
Devon Funds Morning Note - 04 March 2026
Genesis Energy announces opening of Rights Offer
March 4th Morning Report
Comvita appoints Andrea Wilkins as Chief Marketing Officer
Synlait provides banking facilities update
CHI - Channel Infrastructure delivers solid FY25 financial result
February 27th Morning Report
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
MEE - Me Today announces six-month results to 31 December 2025