From a volatility perspective, AUDUSD 1-week (options) implied volatility sits at 11.2% - the 20th percentile of the 12-month range – in essence, the market is not expecting an outsized move through the week, and that makes sense – however, there are still reasons to believe we could see big movement in the AUD, AUS200 and Aussie bank/consumer plays.
Having just seen the Aus Q1 CPI print – with the trimmed mean CPI measure coming in below expectations at 6.6% - interest rate futures are pricing just 3bp – or a 12% chance - of a hike at the May RBA meeting. Rates traders hold a high conviction that the cash rate will remain at 3.6%. So naturally if we were to see the RBA hike by 25bp it would be a shock, and the AUD would likely spike 50-70 pips off the bat.
It's rare that the market has such a strong view, and the RBA doesn’t ultimately meet the market.
If we look further out the interest rate futures ‘curve’ at forward expectations, we see 13bp of hikes priced by September to reach a peak rate of 3.7%. This feels fair, with the market essentially pricing a premium that if we get a hotter Q1 wage price index (17 May), employment report (18 May) and monthly CPI print (31 May) that the RBA may look at massaging the cash rate higher sometime in Q3. There’s obviously a lot that can happen between that time.
Given this forward rate pricing, if we do see the RBA leave rates at 3.6% at the May meeting, the market will reconcile the tone of the statement to this forward pricing. It seems likely the statement will be largely unchanged, with the RBA offering the flexibility to hike in the future, again making it clear that they are data dependent.