Supposedly the drop in the petrol price was going to provide a boost to world economies.
The RBA action shows the extra money from lower petrol costs hasn’t helped.
If the drop in the petrol price didn’t help the economy, why would a drop in home loan repayments be any different?
Already cheap funding getting cheaper – we’ve negotiating heavy discounting across the board for months from the lenders, so no doubt we will see the majority of lenders passing on the full amount. Some smaller lenders have already done so.
Am concerned if this will lead to a “financial armageddon”. In the short-term I’m wondering if the banks will pass on and if this may stimulate property buyers to come out in market areas that have been neutral to negative.
Smart stimulus is an oxymoron. Fiscal and monetary intervention is very bad long term. Artificially low interest rates create imbalances that lead to either consumer price inflation or asset bubbles or both. Credit expansion makes people believe that they are more prosperous than they really are, which will of course eventually lead to disappointment. The correction will come. We should opt for a little pain now rather than a lot of pain later.
I don’t think 25 basis points is going to make a huge difference. Confidence is low across the board when it comes to business and consumers. There may be a bump in activity but it is probably just short term. The small businesses contacts I’m talking with are struggling for every penny atm. GDP growth is trending downwards. Unless there’s a real circuit breaker I’m looking at more of the same. I think 2015 budget will be crucial. Joe Hockey, over to you.
itsandrew
Go as far as you can see and you will see further.
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