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An Economic Outlook: Glass Half Full? Christopher Nielson Corporate Treasury Specialist 14 August, 2009 Besa Deda Chief Economist Road Map • World economic outlook • Domestic economic conditions • Interest rate outlook • Credit market developments • Aussie dollar outlook Australian Economy Avoids the ‘R’ Word GDP In Various Economies (Q4 2008 and Q1 2009) • 1 0 Australia is sharing in some of the pain of the world -1 economic downturn. • -2 But growth prospects remain -3 more favourable in Australia -4 than in other major Q4 2008 Q1 2009 economies around the world. -5 A ustralia US UK Japan Euro zo ne Australia – Ahead of the Pack %pa 2 Consensus GDP Forecasts for 2009 Consensus GDP Forecasts for 2010 %pa 3 Source: Consensus Economics 0 2 -2 -4 1 -6 Source: Consensus Economics 0 -8 A ust • US Euro zo ne Japan UK A ust US Euro zo ne Japan Australia will remain ahead of the pack, although next year the US is expected to pip Australia at the post. UK Why? S&P Credit Ratings of Banks Terms of Trade (ratio of export to im port prices) 135 AAA AAA AA+ AA+ AA AA AA 110 AA AA AA 85 A us t ra lia 's B igF o ur B a nk s AA AA AA AA 60 0 Sep-59 • A s at 15 July 2009 Sep-69 Sep-79 Sep-89 Sep-99 Sep-09 20 40 60 80 100 M arket Capitalizatio n (US$ bn) A healthy banking system, strong regulatory system, still high terms of trade, aggressive stimulus from the RBA & Federal Government and strong population growth. 120 Consumer Spending – Shifting to a Higher Gear % -40 Retail Trade and Petrol (annual rate, 3-m th m oving avg) % Australian Share Market 7,000 7,000 6,000 6,000 5,000 5,000 4,000 4,000 3,000 3,000 2,000 2,000 12 P etro l prices (inverse axis, lhs) -20 8 0 4 20 A ustralia retail trade (rhs) 40 Jan-02 • • Jan-04 Jan-06 Jan-08 0 31-M ar-00 31-M ar-03 31-M ar-06 31-M ar-09 Some negatives on the consumer are receding - including lower petrol prices, improved share markets & lower mortgage rates. But the prospect of higher unemployment remains. Consumer Sentiment Does a U Turn Consumer Sentiment Index 130 130 Lo ng Run A verage 110 110 90 90 So urce: Westpac-M elbo urne Institute 70 Jan-98 70 Jul-00 Jan-03 Jul-05 Jan-08 • Consumers are more optimistic about the future. Clear & Present Danger %pa Labour Market Indicators 60 5 A NZ Jo b A ds (lhs) 40 Net Job Gains or Losses %pa 4 300 300 Glo bal Credit Crisis 200 200 Early 1990s Recessio n 20 3 0 2 -20 1 100 100 0 0 -100 -100 -200 -200 -300 -300 Emplo yment (rhs) -40 0 -60 -1 Jan-00 • • Jan-02 Jan-04 Jan-06 Jan-08 Part- Full-Time Time Part- Full-Time Time The peak in the unemployment rate will occur mid next year. We expect the peak to be 7.5-8.0% (from 5.8% now). Rising unemployment could instil caution among consumers. Housing Lending Revs Up FIRST-HOME BUYERS Number of Housing Loans %pa 40 (to ow ner occupiers) %pa 40 20 20 0 0 -20 -20 -40 -40 Jan-04 Jan-05 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 • % (% of total hom e buyers) % 30 30 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 Jan-92 Jan-97 Jan-02 Jan-07 The boost to the First Home Owners grant and rate cuts are spurring the recovery. House Price Trends National House Prices (annual % change) 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 Source: Australian Property M onitor -10 M ar-88 • • -10 M ar-93 M ar-98 M ar-03 M ar-08 Trends in housing lending will flow through to house prices. The lower end of the market is picking up, reflecting the strong demand from first-home buyers. Unsung Hero – Population Growth '000s Australian Housing Shortage % 180 160 Data Source: BIS Schrapnel Population Growth Rate % 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.5 1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5 (f) 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 -20 1999 • • 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 M ar-90 M ar-94 M ar-98 Population growth nationally is at 40-year highs. It is not purely an immigration story. M ar-02 M ar-06 Frost Bite in Commercial Property • A more pronounced downturn in the non-residential building sector is being witnessed. Falls sharper for large-scale projects. Partly reflects restricted access to external financing. • Commercial sector closely tied to state of the labour market. Business Investment Outlook – Slow Sign Ahead Business Sector 20 25 10 20 • Work in the pipeline means business investment has not collapsed. 0 15 -10 • private business investment. 10 NA B B usiness Co nfidence 3M M A (lhs) -20 B usiness Credit %pa (rhs) -30 M ar-97 5 M ar-03 M ar-06 M ar-09 • But business investment for this financial year and next is still set 0 M ar-00 Government injections will assist to be scaled back further. Interest Rates – The Race to Zero Is Over? Cash Rate Expectations Cash Rates % (by end Decem ber 2009) % 8 8 14 A ustralia So urce: B lo o mberg survey o f 19 eo no mists o n 13 July. 6 6 4 4 Euro zo ne 2 2 2 2 US 1 0 0 2.00 2.25 Japan UK 0 • 2.50 2.75 3.00 3.25 Jan-05 0 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 We think the RBA is done cutting rates. We think the next move in the cash rate will be up early next year. How Soon Will the RBA Start Tapping on the Brakes? Where will the Cash Rate Be By the End of June 2010? 15 So urce: B lo o mberg survey o f 19 eco no mists o n 31uly 2009 11 10 5 5 3 0 Lo wer • Same Higher Financial markets are starting to entertain rate hikes within six months. US – A Dim Light at the End of the Tunnel? %pa '000s US Housing Statistics 60 100 NA HB Ho using Sentiment Index, 3M M A (rhs) 30 US Labour Market 400 280 200 347 0 413 50 0 0 No n-Farm P ayro lls Change, 3M M A (lhs) -200 480 -400 -30 -50 Ho using starts (lhs) -600 -60 Jan-85 • -100 Jan-90 Jan-95 Jan-00 Jan-05 '000s Jan-10 547 Initial Jo bless Claims 4-Week M o ving A verage - Reverse A xis (rhs) 613 -800 Jan-02 Jan-04 Jan-06 Jan-08 We believe the US economy is bottoming and may already be recovering. But the recovery will be U in shape not a V-shaped one. The AUD’s Dashboard Risk Aversion & the AUD 90 % 0.60 6 0.70 50 0.80 30 0.90 1.00 A ustralian-US 2Year Swap Spread, % (lhs) A UD/USD Inverted A xis (rhs) 70 AUD & 2-Year Swap Spread 4 0.85 2 0.70 0 0.55 A UD/USD (rhs) VIX Vo latility Index (lhs) 10 1.00 06-Jul-07 • • 06-Jul-08 06-Jul-09 -2 Jan-96 0.40 Jan-00 Jan-04 Jan-08 Investors appetite towards risk is a dominant driver of the AUD. 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