The Reserve Bank of Australia has left the cash rate unchanged at 2.5 per cent, as widely expected, though warned about the challenges of a weakening property market in the near term.
It has been largely successful in its jawboning attempts to cool what it saw as an overpriced housing market in Sydney and Melbourne with real estate agents reporting declining numbers attending auctions.
The RBA had stepped up its warnings about falling house prices as well as suggesting the use of "macroprudential tools" such as stricter testing of borrowers' ability to withstand interest rates rises.
The latest statement said the most prudent course was likely to be a "period of stability" in interest rates. Long-term interest rates and risk spreads remain very low and the markets appear to think it unlikely there would be a rise in global interest rates or other adverse event over the period ahead, it said.
Growth in the global economy was continuing at a moderate pace and while some data suggested a slowing in recent months in China's growth, it was generally in line with policymakers' objectives.