In response to the coronavirus epidemic, the RBA cut the cash rate on 19 March to 0.25% and announced a number of QE measures. In the long run, will the government’s response deliver the benefits it is hoping for?
Darren Langer and Chris Rands explore this and what it means for fixed income in this special edition of The Rate Debate. Tune in now.
Click below to go to the Nikko website to listen to the podcast.
Listen to the full podcast series:
- Podcast 1: The Rate Debate
- Podcast 2: Down, but not out
- Podcast 3: The Rate Debate Special Edition
- Podcast 4: The RBA’s buying spree
- Podcast 5: Credit crunch or crisis?
- Podcast 6: Out of step
- Podcast 7: Sting in the tale
- Podcast 8: Is Australia ready for more monetary stimulus?
- Podcast 9: Talk is cheap
- Podcast 10: Has the RBA gone too far by not going far enough?
- Podcast 11: The RBA finally unleashes the bazooka
- Podcast 12: Could house prices top 20% growth in 2021?
- Podcast 13: Could housing be the good news story for 2021?
- Podcast 14: What’s driving interest rates higher?
- Podcast 15: Is the free ride over?
- Podcast 16: Are we heading for a debt trap?
- Podcast 17: Could an increase in interest rates derail the housing market?
- Podcast 18: The market versus the RBA – is a hike before 2024 likely?
- Podcast 19: RBA sees Delta impact as a temporary phenomenon
- Podcast 20: Is the RBA banking on a rebound?
- Podcast 20: Is the RBA banking on a rebound?
- Podcast 21: Is the heat coming off the housing market?
- Podcast 22: Bond market loses confidence in the RBA’s forward guidance
- Podcast 23: The reopening trade to determine economic growth in 2022
- Podcast 24: Podcast 24: RBA ends QE and pushes back on rate hike
- Podcast 25:RBA ends QE and pushes back on rate hike
- Podcast 26: How high and how fast can rates go?
- Podcast 27: Is the RBA risking a recession to solve inflation?
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