Economy June 11, 2026 04:30 PM

RBA Poised to Hold Rates June 16 as Growth Cools; Some Economists See Further Rises in Q3

Economists in Reuters poll largely expect a pause at 4.35% while a minority foresee additional tightening later this year

By Marcus Reed
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A Reuters poll conducted June 5-11 shows the Reserve Bank of Australia is widely expected to pause its rate hikes at its June 16 meeting, leaving the cash rate at 4.35% after three consecutive increases since February. Weakening GDP growth and rising unemployment give policymakers room to assess the effects of tighter policy even as inflation remains elevated amid the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran. Economists are split on the outlook for the end of September, with a sizeable minority forecasting further increases.

RBA Poised to Hold Rates June 16 as Growth Cools; Some Economists See Further Rises in Q3
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Key Points

  • Reuters poll (June 5-11) shows 42 of 45 economists expect the RBA to keep the cash rate at 4.35% on June 16.
  • Economic indicators have softened: Q1 GDP growth slowed to 0.3% from 0.9% and unemployment rose to 4.5% in April.
  • Economists are split on the near-term path for rates: 26 of 44 expect 4.35% by end-September while 18 forecast at least 4.60%; major banks are similarly divided.

Policymakers at the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) are expected to step back from further tightening at their June 16 meeting, according to a Reuters poll of economists conducted from June 5 to June 11. The consensus view reflects a cooling domestic economy and the need to evaluate the impact of three successive rate increases implemented since February.

Current policy position

The RBA has lifted the cash rate by 75 basis points since February, taking it to 4.35% and reversing the easing implemented last year. The tightening campaign is intended to curb price pressures that were already present before an energy shock linked in the poll to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran added to global inflationary forces.

Economic indicators weigh on decision

Monetary policy is beginning to show effects on activity. Gross domestic product growth slowed to 0.3% in the first quarter from 0.9% in the previous quarter, while the labour market has softened with unemployment rising to 4.5% in April, the highest level since November 2021. Against that backdrop, 42 of 45 economists in the Reuters poll expected the RBA to hold the cash rate at 4.35% on Tuesday.

"The chance of a move at the June meeting is very low," said Taylor Nugent, senior economist at NAB. "The RBA has now recalibrated policy and were seeing evidence it was enough to get on top of domestically driven inflation pressures. That means the RBA can sit and hold from here while it assesses risks to inflation and growth coming out of the conflict in the Middle East."

Inflation dynamics

Headline inflation eased to 4.2% in April from Marchs 4.6%, yet it remains above the RBAs 2% to 3% target band. A core inflation measure edged up to 3.4% as higher oil prices fed through the broader economy, a dynamic that has kept inflationary risks on the radar of some forecasters.

Differences in the near-term outlook

There is a split among economists about where rates will sit by the end of the third quarter. A majority, 26 of 44 respondents, expect the cash rate to be 4.35% at the end of September. However, 18 of the economists polled forecast the rate will be at least 4.60% by then, citing ongoing inflationary pressures. The division is similar for the outlook into the fourth quarter.

"There is still some risk they need to do a little bit more," added NABs Nugent. "But we expect the data flow over the next few months to come in a way that suggests the RBA has done enough and we expect concerns around inflation to fade."

Not all forecasters agree that policy has peaked. "The RBA still has to hike further," said AMP economist My Bui. "Markets have cut back a lot on pricing but it seems to us the pressures are still there. And right now, if you look at the RBAs recent communications, they are very worried inflation expectations could get out of hand."

Financial sector positions

Major Australian banks including ANZ, CBA and NAB have signalled they view the cash rate as having peaked. By contrast, Westpac projects an eventual lift to 4.85%.


This divergence among economists and financial institutions frames the RBAs immediate task: weigh signs that policy is cooling activity against persistent inflationary pressures, some of which are linked to international developments. The June meeting will give the bank a window to pause and collect more data on the path ahead.

Risks

  • Inflation remains elevated at 4.2% in April and core inflation rose to 3.4% as higher oil prices filter through - this keeps pressure on prices and risks for interest-rate sensitive sectors such as housing and financials.
  • Geopolitical-driven energy price shocks linked to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran could sustain inflationary pressures, adding uncertainty for policy and markets reliant on stable fuel and freight costs.
  • A split in expectations among economists and banks creates uncertainty for business planning and financial markets, affecting sectors sensitive to rate expectations including banking, real estate and corporate borrowing.

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