RBA predictable. ME Bank stupid. Business squeezed. Just another day along Money Road.
Mortgage holders are disappointed with the recent interest rate h ike

The backpedal begins

The RBA has raised rates again, which in central-bank speak means: “We tried vibes, now we’re trying pain.” After last year’s ill-timed pivot to easier policy, inflation refused to lie down quietly. Prices stayed sticky, demand stayed stubborn, and the Bank has now yanked the wheel back in the other direction. The cash rate is up, credibility is… under review.

This wasn’t a bold move so much as a corrective one. The RBA is effectively admitting its earlier “soft landing” experiment didn’t work. Inflation remains above target, and the Bank is now playing catch-up — the least dignified phase of any economic cycle.

Policy punching bags

Mortgage holders, naturally, are the designated shock absorbers. Higher repayments are landing immediately, shaving hundreds off monthly household budgets. This is the RBA’s preferred transmission mechanism: hit consumption until it stops moving. Elegant? No. Effective? Eventually. Painless? Absolutely not.

And Australia now looks awkwardly out of step. While other major economies are talking about cuts or long pauses, the RBA is tightening. That doesn’t make it brave — it makes it late. Markets see that too, which is why expectations are jittery and confidence remains thin.

Poor behaviour

The banks, meanwhile, have performed exactly as expected. ME Bank managed to say it was “pleased” to raise rates — a sentence that will be studied in future communications courses under What Not To Do. Others are dangling cashback offers to soothe borrowers, a tactic best described as “here’s $2,000, now enjoy decades of higher interest”.

None of this changes the underlying reality. Rates are higher, margins are protected, and the cost of capital is rising — with a smile, apparently.

Market shrug, business squeeze

On the market side, the reaction was muted. The dollar lifted, equities shrugged, and investors moved on. No one was shocked. This wasn’t a surprise hike — it was an inevitability finally acknowledged.

Business borrowers aren’t escaping either. Major banks have moved to lift business loan rates, tightening conditions for SMEs already juggling costs, wages and soft demand. Yes, alternative lenders are still growing. No, that doesn’t make money cheaper.

Summary

In short, this is what policy regret looks like. The RBA eased too early, inflation lingered, and now the bill is being paid — by households, by businesses, and by anyone who believed the hard part was over.

It wasn’t. It still isn’t.

Money Road is the finance blog for people who’ve stared into the abyss of a lender’s T’s & C’s and decided the abyss needs better punctuation.

Its author — a former journalist turned business lender — knows how stories get spun and how credit actually gets priced.

The result: dry humour, mild mordancy, and a strict “no Kool-Aid, no cheerleading, no fairy tales” house policy.

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Disclaimer

Money Road makes selective use of ChatGPT for drafting and imagery because robots don’t complain about overtime or require superannuation.  Facts are always checked by humans, and the jokes, hot takes, and petty grudges are strictly the editor’s.  Blame apportioned!