Minutes from the Reserve Bank's August 3, 2010 meeting show that RBA is comfortable with the current level of interest rates, which forcing households to stop speculating on property and save more.
European banks passed the stress tests without a hitch and the underlying inflation in Australia fell to 2.7%, hence there was no rate rise in August.
Credit growth remained soft and the housing market had stabilised after the surge in prices late last year and earlier this year...
The inflation data released during the month were in line with the Board's expectations for a decline, and the outlook for economic growth had not changed. Markets had settled somewhat, but there was still more uncertainty over the global outlook than there had been earlier in the year. The Board therefore judged the existing level of the cash rate as still appropriate, and decided to leave it unchanged for the time being, pending further information.
The minutes seem to support most market economists' views that the official cash rate will remain on hold until next inflation data, which is due in late October. So Australians should have steady rates until at least November.
