The RBA has warned that global markets may be underestimating geopolitical and macroeconomic risks

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The Reserve Bank of Australia has warned that global markets may be underestimating growing geopolitical and macroeconomic risks. RBA Assistant Governor Brad Jones cautioned that if tensions rise, early indicators of financial fragmentation, such as changes in central bank reserve holdings, could reveal weaknesses.

RBA Assistant Governor Brad Jones spoke on Wednesday at the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia conference in Broadbeach, Queensland.  In his speech, Jones pointed to “emerging evidence” of disparities in central banks’ reserve management practices, specifically a rise in gold holdings among a select group of nations.

RBA warns of market overconfidence risks

Brad Jones claimed that there was growing evidence that central banks’ reserve asset holdings were becoming fragmented. He stated that a group of nations essentially accounts for all the rise in gold holdings by central banks. Jones added that it is obvious that some of this is due to the possibility of asset confiscation sanctions.

Jones also mentioned issues with fragmentation in financial safety nets and international payments.  He emphasized that fragmentation issues are currently “more a fear than a lived reality.” According to Jones, risk premiums across asset classes have dropped to “concerning lows.”

He claimed that the drop indicates that markets are having difficulty pricing in binary or geopolitical risk.

“It’s not so much that we think that the levels of risk premiums are completely unsustainable, we’re just surprised that there’s not a bit more reflected in those levels of spreads given what we observe, which is quite a confronting set of potential risks.”

-Brad Jones, RBA Assistant Governor.

Jones claimed that many central banks are perplexed as to why market pricing appears to be so elevated.

Jones’s comments show the growing government concern that, amid escalating geopolitical tensions and global economic realignments, financial markets have become unduly complacent.  

The RBA is raising awareness of market behavior and the possibility of shocks that challenge policy intervention assumptions as central banks adapt to a more fragmented environment.

RBA signals inflation risks and rate outlook

Last month, Michele Bullock, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, warned that a sharp decline in global optimism could lead to financial instability and prompt further interest rate reductions. Speaking on October 27 at the annual Australian Business Economists event in Sydney, she claimed that despite geopolitical and economic threats, investors appeared unduly comfortable.

Ms. Bullock informed the Sydney group that her international counterparts were “flummoxed” by how “sanguine” or hopeful the financial markets had become.

She questioned if the financial markets may go negative, “Could it all end up very badly?”

According to Bullock, the low risk premiums are the reason for the low credit spreads. She stated that although the unemployment rate in Australia increased to 4.5% in September, the job market was still “tight.”

Additionally, she confirmed that if the markets undergo a major directional shift, the RBA would need to focus on financial stability issues.

In response to a reporter’s question about whether the RBA would lower interest rates amid an “AI bubble,” Bullock stated that the board does not consider asset prices when making monetary policy decisions. However, she stated that the RBA would consider lowering interest rates if the financial markets did decline sharply and it harmed the economy, without mentioning the potential for an AI bubble to collapse.

On Monday, RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser said in a speech that there is growing discussion about whether the current cash rate of 3.6% is restrictive enough to control inflation. The topic is crucial for the policy outlook.

According to Hauser, there was little room to increase without driving up inflation, as demand was “slightly” over potential when GDP growth picked up last year, marking the tightest recovery since the early 1980s. Hauser claimed that the belief that inflation would continue to decline in the economy is largely based on the current assessment that monetary policy is rather restrictive.

The central bank now projects inflation will remain above the 2-3% target zone until mid-2026, based on the expectation of one more rate drop next year.  

According to the RBA, the third-quarter inflation statistics came in surprisingly high, leading the bank to forecast it will settle at 2.6%, slightly above the 2.5% midpoint

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