Thursday, October 29, 2009

Australian Property Prices set to rise even with stronger Australian Dollar

Australian Dollar Rate Outlook

TASMANIA'S Clarence City is Australia’s best property bargain according to a list of the country’s 100 hottest suburbs. Investors can pick up an average house in Clarence City suburbs of Clarendon Vale and Rokeby to Hobart's east for just $178,000, according to a report in Australian Property Investor magazine.

It’s a "long-term hold" but the area will see significant growth in five to seven years, the report says. The magazine asked Australia’s top property experts to list the hottest 100 suburbs poised for "strong capital growth" over the next 12 months.

With an average median house price of $548,000 across the 100 locations, news.com.au identified the cheapest of those suburbs and they are listed below. You can read the full list in the magazine, which is out today. Also released today, the Australian Property Monitors quarterly house price series showed house price growth of 3.7 per cent over the September quarter.

"Moderate to strong growth is expected across the market as a whole for the remainder of 2009 and 2010," APM's Matthew Bell said. "The question as to whether this growth can be sustained throughout 2010 depends on how quickly mortgage rates rise in the next six months," Mr Bell said.

Hottest suburbs with the lowest average house price

Queensland
Gympie $260,000
Ipswich $269,000
Kingaroy $270,000
Beaudesert $311,000

New South Wales
Gunnedah $208,000
Branxton $349,000
Granville $353,000
Shoalhaven $388,000

Victoria
Portland $189,000
Redan $194,000
Hastings $270,000
Frankston $300,000

WA
Geraldton $345,000
Thornlie $363,000
Bassendean $415,000
Hamilton Hill $430,000

Tasmania
Clarence City $178,000
Lutana $282,000
Mount Nelson $420,000
Hobart $425,000

NT
Rapid Creek $568,000

South Australia
Ceduna $245,000
Glanville $249,000
O'Sullivan Beach $261,000
Christies Beach $301,000

ACT
Gungahlin $458,000

Pounds to Australian Dollars = 1.8218
Euros To Australian Dollars = 1.6294
Australian Dollars to US Dollars = 0.9037
Australian Dollars to New Zealand Dollars = 1.2450

Bye For Now

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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Best buy Australian Dollar as the exchange rate looks towards Parity

Australian Dollar Rate Outlook

The Australian dollar was once again a top performer to finish the week’s trade as speculators poured into the progressively higher-yielding Aussie currency. Hawkish rhetoric by Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens underlined the bank’s resolve to tighten monetary policy sooner than later. Indeed, Overnight Index Swaps are now pricing in an impressive 200+ points of rate hikes in the coming 12 months-by far the most of any G7 central bank. All else remaining equal, this should provide solid Australian Dollar support against lower-yielding counterparts. Yet the pace of Australian Dollar appreciation has been nothing short of impressive, and one has to wonder whether the currency can continue its recent advances. An effectively empty economic calendar gives little in the way of foreseeable event risk in the week ahead, and as such it remains most important to watch for major moves in key asset classes.

A speech by RBA Governor Glenn Stevens set the tone for what may be an aggressive wave of monetary policy tightening. Stevens discusses monetary stimulus in light of the global financial crisis, emphasizing that Australia seems to have weathered the broader economic crisis and escaped relatively unharmed. Economic resilience suggests that previously aggressive interest rate cuts have done their job, and in fact the central bank has already begun reversing its monetary policy accommodation. In its recent rate hike the RBA stated that rate hikes should "gradually" be pulled back.

Yet Stevens surprised many when he effectively foreshadowed rate hikes with similar intensity to the large cuts we saw through the financial crisis. He clarifies that he does not believe that the Australian economy is currently "too strong", but he does go on to say "that the very low interest rate settings were designed for a weaker economy than we are in fact facing." Interest rate expectations jumped on the commentary, and in fact markets are now pricing in a 50 percent chance of an aggressive 50 basis point (0.50 percent) rate increase through the November meeting.

Expectations are running high for Australian Dollar yields and the currency itself. The key question in the weeks and months ahead will be whether reality can match those lofty expectations. As it stands, a number of respected research desks have called for Australian Dollar parity against the US Dollar rate in the coming months. Yet near record-high Aussie correlations to key commodity prices suggest that AUD forecasts may depend on broader moves in key financial asset classes. Suffice it to say, there should be no shortage of excitement in upcoming Australian Dollar trade.

or the full story visit www.dailyfx.com

Pounds to Australian Dollars = 1.7679
Euros To Australian Dollars = 1.6162
Australian Dollars to US Dollars = 0.9257
Australian Dollars to New Zealand Dollars = 1.2295

Bye For Now

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Friday, October 16, 2009

Australian dollar could soon be worth 1.100 US Dollars

Australian Dollar Rate Outlook

THE Australian dollar appears headed towards parity with the US dollar after Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens agreed the economy's strength could drive it"way up" to $US1.10.
The dollar jumped after Mr Stevens also suggested that the Reserve Bank would not be “too timid” in further increasing the official interest rate, breaking through US92c to reach 14-month highs. His comments startled foreign exchange market analysts and encouraged money markets to bet that the Reserve would lift its cash rate from 3.25 per cent to at least 3.75 per cent before Christmas and keep lifting next year, The Australian reports.“I tend to agree with him,” the Commonwealth Bank’s chief currency strategist, Richard Grace, said of Mr Stevens’s Aussie dollar bullishness.

But while Mr Stevens suggested the dollar’s rise was the result of Australia’s economic vigour, Wayne Swan warned that it would hurt farmers and other export industries. “I do understand some people will do it really tough as a consequence of a higher AUD rate ,” the Treasurer said. Since October 2, just before the Reserve Bank lifted its 3 per cent “emergency” cash rate, the dollar has gained nearly 7 per cent, from US86c to US92.11c in European trading last night. The dollar’s rise could further increase the tension between the Reserve Bank’s rate rise move and the Rudd government’s rejection of calls to unwind its budget stimulus more quickly. In theory, an expansionary budget policy pushes up an economy’s exchange rate.

The Reserve Bank is not intervening in foreign exchange markets to dampen the currency’s ascent, which is akin to a policy tightening that mostly hits exporters and businesses that compete against imports. But it also contains inflation by making imports cheaper. The Australian sharemarket rose again yesterday on the back of improved investor confidence in the Australian and global economies, with the All Ordinaries index gaining 28.5 points or 0.59 per cent to hit a one-year high.

Mr Stevens was asked at a breakfast function in Perth whether the Reserve Bank had any tools to prevent speculators buying Australian dollars to $US1.10. Mr Stevens replied that, rather than speculators, there usually was a rational reason for big exchange rate movements. “You could do a scenario where the exchange rates goes way up,” he said. “We’ve got one of the better-performing economies in the world. Even at very low interest rates, we still have a positive differential and we’re a country where the people here are, I think, reasonably confident about the future and foreigners are fairly confident about our future, and it’s not entirely surprising that they’re a bit keen on the currency.”

Mr Stevens suggested that this could change if economic recoveries in other countries surprised on the upside. “But you could do a scenario of the one you suggest and, in that world, perhaps inflation is lower, but the reason the AUD exchange rate is up there is probably that there are some very strong growth dynamics and trade dynamics at work here.”

The Australian dollar exchange rate has not traded at parity with the US dollar rate since the local currency floated in late 1983, but appeared headed towards this level before the global crisis hit.

for the full story visit http://www.news.com.au

Pounds to Australian Dollars = 1.7738
Euros To Australian Dollars = 1.6155
Australian Dollars to US Dollars = 0.9226
Australian Dollars to New Zealand Dollars = 1.2395

Bye For Now

IMS Foreign Exchange

Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790