Will bank term deposit rates move up in line with expected cash rate increases?
June 1, 2023
June 1, 2023
June 1, 2023
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Cash rates and deposit rates will increase in the foreseeable future but what is unclear is by how much and how quickly.
Expected increases in the RBA cash rate will likely see higher term deposit rates
However, term deposit rates offered by banks are influenced by numerous factors
Savers will be the beneficiaries of higher rates and AltX investment products will continue to offer relatively attractive risk-adjusted returns
Will bank term deposit rates move up in line with expected cash rate increases?
With consecutive increases in the official cash rate in May (0.25%) and June (0.50%), and a 63% market expectation of outsize move of 0.70% to 1.50% at the July RBA Board meeting, the tightening cycle is well underway. The financial markets are expecting further rate hikes to contain inflationary with the implied terminal cash rate of close to 4% to be reached around mid 2023.
This broadly follows aggressive actions by the other central banks but there are diverging views in Australia on the timing and quantum of future rises in the cash rate. But is the market overestimating how quickly the RBA will raise rates? Certainly several bank economists expect that the cash rate will not peak as high as currently priced by markets because the RBA’s front-end loading of hikes will prove to be effective in meeting the inflation challenge.
From an investors standpoint, it’s interesting to consider the impact of RBA rate hikes on bank term deposit rates and the relative attractiveness of fixed income as an asset class more broadly.
Of all the factors that influence a term deposit’s interest rate, the cash rate is arguably the most crucial. Some banks pass on cash rate changes to customers, when the cash rate moves, so do term deposits rates and typically with a short lag. Whilst there exists a historical correlation between the cash rate and bank term deposit rates, there are a multitude of different factors that can impact a term deposit rates offered by banks including:
market competition
banking regulations (incl. liquidity ratios)
wholesale term funding costs
the deposit term
minimum investment amount.
The last period of sustained interest rate rises in Australia was between October 2003 and March 2008 when the cash rate went from 4.75% to 7.25%. Over this same period, the average bank term deposit rate rose from 3.45% to 5.05%. So the cash rate increased 2.5% while term deposits moved up only 1.6% and as the chart below illustrates, the first few years were not in lockstep.
Currently, in addition to the banks coming under pressure to pass on the benefit of higher rates to savers, competition for retail deposits amongst the banks is likely to be heightened by higher wholesale funding costs for banks and the runoff of the RBA’s Term Funding Facility. Indeed since the Reserve bank’s cash rate increase, several of the major banks have raised rates on various popular at-call deposit products by the same 25 basis points, with one bank lifting the interest rate on its 18-month term deposits by 1.95 percentage points to 2.25%.
In conclusion, there seems little doubt that cash rates and, by extension, term deposit rates will increase in the foreseeable future but what is unclear is by how much and how quickly. The actual path of rates will, of course, only been known when investors are able to look back in two- or three-years’ time. Right now, AltX offers yields between 5% and 8% for secured first mortgage investments, which is and we think will remain an attractive risk-adjusted premium over average term deposit rates.
Expected increases in the RBA cash rate will likely see higher term deposit rates
However, term deposit rates offered by banks are influenced by numerous factors
Savers will be the beneficiaries of higher rates and AltX investment products will continue to offer relatively attractive risk-adjusted returns
Will bank term deposit rates move up in line with expected cash rate increases?
With consecutive increases in the official cash rate in May (0.25%) and June (0.50%), and a 63% market expectation of outsize move of 0.70% to 1.50% at the July RBA Board meeting, the tightening cycle is well underway. The financial markets are expecting further rate hikes to contain inflationary with the implied terminal cash rate of close to 4% to be reached around mid 2023.
This broadly follows aggressive actions by the other central banks but there are diverging views in Australia on the timing and quantum of future rises in the cash rate. But is the market overestimating how quickly the RBA will raise rates? Certainly several bank economists expect that the cash rate will not peak as high as currently priced by markets because the RBA’s front-end loading of hikes will prove to be effective in meeting the inflation challenge.
From an investors standpoint, it’s interesting to consider the impact of RBA rate hikes on bank term deposit rates and the relative attractiveness of fixed income as an asset class more broadly.
Of all the factors that influence a term deposit’s interest rate, the cash rate is arguably the most crucial. Some banks pass on cash rate changes to customers, when the cash rate moves, so do term deposits rates and typically with a short lag. Whilst there exists a historical correlation between the cash rate and bank term deposit rates, there are a multitude of different factors that can impact a term deposit rates offered by banks including:
market competition
banking regulations (incl. liquidity ratios)
wholesale term funding costs
the deposit term
minimum investment amount.
The last period of sustained interest rate rises in Australia was between October 2003 and March 2008 when the cash rate went from 4.75% to 7.25%. Over this same period, the average bank term deposit rate rose from 3.45% to 5.05%. So the cash rate increased 2.5% while term deposits moved up only 1.6% and as the chart below illustrates, the first few years were not in lockstep.
Currently, in addition to the banks coming under pressure to pass on the benefit of higher rates to savers, competition for retail deposits amongst the banks is likely to be heightened by higher wholesale funding costs for banks and the runoff of the RBA’s Term Funding Facility. Indeed since the Reserve bank’s cash rate increase, several of the major banks have raised rates on various popular at-call deposit products by the same 25 basis points, with one bank lifting the interest rate on its 18-month term deposits by 1.95 percentage points to 2.25%.
In conclusion, there seems little doubt that cash rates and, by extension, term deposit rates will increase in the foreseeable future but what is unclear is by how much and how quickly. The actual path of rates will, of course, only been known when investors are able to look back in two- or three-years’ time. Right now, AltX offers yields between 5% and 8% for secured first mortgage investments, which is and we think will remain an attractive risk-adjusted premium over average term deposit rates.
Expected increases in the RBA cash rate will likely see higher term deposit rates
However, term deposit rates offered by banks are influenced by numerous factors
Savers will be the beneficiaries of higher rates and AltX investment products will continue to offer relatively attractive risk-adjusted returns
Will bank term deposit rates move up in line with expected cash rate increases?
With consecutive increases in the official cash rate in May (0.25%) and June (0.50%), and a 63% market expectation of outsize move of 0.70% to 1.50% at the July RBA Board meeting, the tightening cycle is well underway. The financial markets are expecting further rate hikes to contain inflationary with the implied terminal cash rate of close to 4% to be reached around mid 2023.
This broadly follows aggressive actions by the other central banks but there are diverging views in Australia on the timing and quantum of future rises in the cash rate. But is the market overestimating how quickly the RBA will raise rates? Certainly several bank economists expect that the cash rate will not peak as high as currently priced by markets because the RBA’s front-end loading of hikes will prove to be effective in meeting the inflation challenge.
From an investors standpoint, it’s interesting to consider the impact of RBA rate hikes on bank term deposit rates and the relative attractiveness of fixed income as an asset class more broadly.
Of all the factors that influence a term deposit’s interest rate, the cash rate is arguably the most crucial. Some banks pass on cash rate changes to customers, when the cash rate moves, so do term deposits rates and typically with a short lag. Whilst there exists a historical correlation between the cash rate and bank term deposit rates, there are a multitude of different factors that can impact a term deposit rates offered by banks including:
market competition
banking regulations (incl. liquidity ratios)
wholesale term funding costs
the deposit term
minimum investment amount.
The last period of sustained interest rate rises in Australia was between October 2003 and March 2008 when the cash rate went from 4.75% to 7.25%. Over this same period, the average bank term deposit rate rose from 3.45% to 5.05%. So the cash rate increased 2.5% while term deposits moved up only 1.6% and as the chart below illustrates, the first few years were not in lockstep.
Currently, in addition to the banks coming under pressure to pass on the benefit of higher rates to savers, competition for retail deposits amongst the banks is likely to be heightened by higher wholesale funding costs for banks and the runoff of the RBA’s Term Funding Facility. Indeed since the Reserve bank’s cash rate increase, several of the major banks have raised rates on various popular at-call deposit products by the same 25 basis points, with one bank lifting the interest rate on its 18-month term deposits by 1.95 percentage points to 2.25%.
In conclusion, there seems little doubt that cash rates and, by extension, term deposit rates will increase in the foreseeable future but what is unclear is by how much and how quickly. The actual path of rates will, of course, only been known when investors are able to look back in two- or three-years’ time. Right now, AltX offers yields between 5% and 8% for secured first mortgage investments, which is and we think will remain an attractive risk-adjusted premium over average term deposit rates.
Expected increases in the RBA cash rate will likely see higher term deposit rates
However, term deposit rates offered by banks are influenced by numerous factors
Savers will be the beneficiaries of higher rates and AltX investment products will continue to offer relatively attractive risk-adjusted returns
Will bank term deposit rates move up in line with expected cash rate increases?
With consecutive increases in the official cash rate in May (0.25%) and June (0.50%), and a 63% market expectation of outsize move of 0.70% to 1.50% at the July RBA Board meeting, the tightening cycle is well underway. The financial markets are expecting further rate hikes to contain inflationary with the implied terminal cash rate of close to 4% to be reached around mid 2023.
This broadly follows aggressive actions by the other central banks but there are diverging views in Australia on the timing and quantum of future rises in the cash rate. But is the market overestimating how quickly the RBA will raise rates? Certainly several bank economists expect that the cash rate will not peak as high as currently priced by markets because the RBA’s front-end loading of hikes will prove to be effective in meeting the inflation challenge.
From an investors standpoint, it’s interesting to consider the impact of RBA rate hikes on bank term deposit rates and the relative attractiveness of fixed income as an asset class more broadly.
Of all the factors that influence a term deposit’s interest rate, the cash rate is arguably the most crucial. Some banks pass on cash rate changes to customers, when the cash rate moves, so do term deposits rates and typically with a short lag. Whilst there exists a historical correlation between the cash rate and bank term deposit rates, there are a multitude of different factors that can impact a term deposit rates offered by banks including:
market competition
banking regulations (incl. liquidity ratios)
wholesale term funding costs
the deposit term
minimum investment amount.
The last period of sustained interest rate rises in Australia was between October 2003 and March 2008 when the cash rate went from 4.75% to 7.25%. Over this same period, the average bank term deposit rate rose from 3.45% to 5.05%. So the cash rate increased 2.5% while term deposits moved up only 1.6% and as the chart below illustrates, the first few years were not in lockstep.
Currently, in addition to the banks coming under pressure to pass on the benefit of higher rates to savers, competition for retail deposits amongst the banks is likely to be heightened by higher wholesale funding costs for banks and the runoff of the RBA’s Term Funding Facility. Indeed since the Reserve bank’s cash rate increase, several of the major banks have raised rates on various popular at-call deposit products by the same 25 basis points, with one bank lifting the interest rate on its 18-month term deposits by 1.95 percentage points to 2.25%.
In conclusion, there seems little doubt that cash rates and, by extension, term deposit rates will increase in the foreseeable future but what is unclear is by how much and how quickly. The actual path of rates will, of course, only been known when investors are able to look back in two- or three-years’ time. Right now, AltX offers yields between 5% and 8% for secured first mortgage investments, which is and we think will remain an attractive risk-adjusted premium over average term deposit rates.