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December 23, 2024
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The silver lining in the weakest GDP growth in 30 years


While the RBA will remain rightly concerned about the renewed strength in house prices, the strength in the labour market and the potential stickiness of services inflation (particularly rent), the spending restraint that is flowing economic growth will support further falls in inflation, which is already dropping faster than the RBA has forecasted. A second consecutive lift in productivity will also be cheered by governor Michele Bullock.

Sharemarket brushes off data

It was notable that local equities and bonds largely ignored the GDP data. Traders remain all in on the first RBA rate cut arriving in September, with market pricing implying a strong chance of a second by Christmas. Capital Economics’ local economist Abhijit Surya says the GDP data broadly supports the firm’s view that the first cut will arrive in August.

The February reporting season told us that investors in the most consumer-exposed sectors, such as discretionary retail, are looking through the short-term weakness in household finances that the GDP data exposes, including a fall in household spending in real (inflation-adjusted) terms and a 1.6 per cent drop in discretionary spending in nominal terms.

Instead, they will remain focused on the fact household incomes are finally rising in real terms (wages rose 4.2 per cent during the quarter and inflation rose 4.1 per cent), stage three tax cuts arrive in July, rate cuts are probably coming and households have plenty of financial firepower, with the savings rate up slightly.

While younger households with big mortgages are obviously doing it tough, spending is being driven by older, wealthier households who are sitting pretty.

Data from UBS economist George Tharenou shows retirement benefits paid in the December quarter boomed about 7 per cent to a record high of $149 billion, equivalent to a 10 per cent share of household income. Despite this, retirement savings still surged 10 per cent year-on-year to a record $3.7 billion; that is a lot of dry powder for consumers to draw on, and adds to belief in a brighter second half to calendar 2024.

While the sharemarket brushed off the data, it will help confirm that some of the drivers of the recent rally remain intact. What growth we did see in the December quarter was driven by the government sector infrastructure spending and private business investment, particularly in non-housing construction, which leapt 5 per cent as money poured into data centres and warehouses.

No wonder the building materials sector has run hot since the start of the November rally, with Reece, James Hardie, Seven Group and takeover targets CSR and Boral up between 40 per cent and 60 per cent over that period.

The spending on data centres and logistics also helps explain the stellar run of Goodman Group (up 51 per cent in the past four months), NextDC (up 42 per cent) and Macquarie Technology (up 30 per cent).

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