RBA still on track for 2%
I missed the mark with regard to Gov Stevens’ speech yesterday, at least as far as the market was concerned.
macro, politics, markets, ambivalence
I missed the mark with regard to Gov Stevens’ speech yesterday, at least as far as the market was concerned.
Following the Q2 CPI report, the market is pricing the August meeting at ~80%. There are decent reasons for this:
The Q2 CPI result came in around where i was expecting, with headline CPI a little higher (it was 0.4%q/q
Today we have Australian Q2 CPI. My best guess is that Q2 headline CPI will be around 0.25%qoq, which will
The June employment report has nicely set up the RBA to cut rates at their August meeting, so long as
The AFR’s star RBA watcher, Alan Mitchell says that the RBA doesn’t need to cut rates at their July meeting.
In the comments, there are often comments to the effect that the labour under-utilisation rate is a better indicator of
The May labour market report was a little better than I had expected (and the market also): the unemployment rate
Following on from my casual survey of the relationship between various measures of demand and inflation, I thought it appropriate
With the drop in the AUD, assessing financial conditions is (again) becoming a hot topic. It’s a tough thing to
The post Q1 GDP recession debate has been both fun and informative (see my first and second posts, and Mark’s
Following last week’s Q1 National Accounts, I cheekily suggested that the domestic economy was in recession. Many of my peers