Economic news

Aussie Jobless at 4-1/2Y High, Lessens Rate Rise Risk

  • Economy lost 18,600 jobs versus forecasts for 15,000 gain
  • Jobless rate jumped to 4.5%, highest since Nov 2021, from 4.3%
  • Investors start to price in some chance rates may have peaked

SYDNEY, May 21 (Reuters) - Australian employment unexpectedly fell in April while the jobless rate jumped to the highest level since ‌late 2021, a possible sign the labour market might be loosening enough to stave off a near-term interest rate hike.

The underwhelming data led markets to pare the chance for a rate hike in June to just 8%, from 20% before, following three consecutive rate increases ​by the central bank this year. A move in August is now seen as 33%, with just ​22 basis points of tightening priced for this year, less than one rate hike.

The Australian dollar ⁠slipped 0.5% to $0.7120, while three-year government bond yields slumped 17 basis points to 4.568%, extending earlier declines.

"Today’s jump ​in unemployment signals that the labour market narrative may be shifting faster than expected. It validates the RBA's inclination to ​hold in June and raises the bar significantly for a change," said Krishna Bhimavarapu, economist at State Street Investment Management.

Figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed net employment fell 18,600 in April from March, when it rose a revised 23,300. That was far below market ​forecasts of a 15,000 gain. Full-time jobs dropped 10,700 after a sharp rise the previous month.

The jobless rate climbed ​to 4.5%, the highest since November 2021, when analysts had looked for a steady 4.3%. The participation rate eased a tick to ‌66.7%. ⁠Hours worked still rose a solid 0.8%.

The ABS noted that a drop in female employment - the first since August 2025 - drove the overall fall.

HIGHER RATES, WAR UNCERTAINTIES

The RBA has raised interest rates three times this year to 4.35% to head off a war-driven global energy shock, fully reversing the amount of policy easing made last year. Annual inflation jumped to ​4.6% in March, way above ​the target band of ⁠2%-3%.

Despite April's disappointing figures, the labour market has generally remained resilient and past sharp increases in the unemployment rate have been revised away. The RBA has judged some additional loosening ​would be needed to counter inflation, predicting the jobless rate may rise to 4.7% ​by mid-2028.

An ANZ ⁠survey showed Australian job ads fell 0.8% in April in the second straight month of declines, while a business survey from the National Australia Bank showed its employment index fell sharply in April.

Harry McAuley, an economist for Oxford Economics Australia, said ⁠the data ​more likely reflected pre-war economic sentiment, given firms' hiring decisions tend ​to lag economic shocks.

"We expect the unemployment rate to peak at 4.8% in late 2027... Business confidence has cratered under higher inputs and borrowing costs, ​which will flow through their hiring decisions."

Reporting by Stella Qiu and Wayne Cole; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Sonali Paul

Source: Reuters


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