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Website improvements

Hi all, A quick note to offer guidance on the new website. As well as the layout changes that make it easier to access content for new readers, it comes with a dramatically improved sign-up and resubscription process, greatly enhanced speed, and a much better mobile experience (since 95% of traffic is now phone!). The

Latest posts

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US exceptionalism launches

The new roaring twenties are US exceptionalism. The Market Ear has more.  NASDAQ – can’t you see what’s going on? If it is all a risk on/off trade, then NASDAQ has some catching up to do. Chart shows NASDAQ vs BTC. Refinitiv Time to talk about Santa? Seasonality from here is very strong. Equity Clock

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Aussie inflation keeps interest rates on hold

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) has released the all-important Q3 Consumer Price Index (CPI) data, which undershot economists and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) expectations. Headline inflation rose by only 02% in Q2, below economists’ expectations of a 0.3% increase. This result was weighed down by energy and rental subsidies. Michelle Marquardt, ABS

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Why is Trump red hot favourite?

The aggregated polls have been swinging: The swing states are a dead heat: I am concerned that these polls cannot be trusted. Whenever you get uniform swings like this, it reeks of pollster consensus hugging. I wonder how much they are smoothing outliers. This is what happened in the 2019 Australian election when Scott Morrison

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More yawnulus for iron ore

SHFE was soft yesterday: Dalian eked out gains: The news on China stimmies is a big round number: China is considering approving next week the issuance of over 10 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) in extra debt in the next few years to revive its fragile economy, a fiscal package which is expected to be further

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Pandemic stimulus party created inflation hangover

The report of the COVID-19 inquiry has concluded that the former Coalition government’s pandemic spending contributed to a spike in the inflation rate. Economic modelling presented to the inquiry found that inflation would have peaked at around 6% with less stimulatory spending by the government and ultra-low official interest rates. Inflation instead reached a high

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Retiring as a renter a “terrifying prospect”

“Dr Demography” Liz Allen from the Australian National University (ANU) is the go-to talking head whenever the media wants a quote about the fantastical benefits of mass immigration. Allen loves to spin positive ‘Big Australia’ propaganda. She also likes to label anyone against excessive immigration racist or xenophobic. A classic example of Allen’s propaganda was

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Australian dollar heads for Hell

DXY has paused for now: AUD has not and long positioning means it can keep falling. If it breaches 0.65 its uptrend is broken and all bets are off: North Asia is ugly: Gold is in blowoff. Oil might break: Metals are in purgatory: Miners too: EM is stuffed: Junk nervy: Yields down: Stocks up:

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Australia transforms into ‘tax and spend’ economy

Michael Read from the Australian Financial Review published the following chart showing the strong growth in federal, state, and local government taxes over the past decade, which have hit a record share of gross domestic product. However, despite the record tax take, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasts that Australia faces six years of deficits

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How Australia’s banks rode the property bubble

Several of Australia’s major banks have pushed for an easing of credit standards to assist first home buyers. ANZ has called for looser credit, claiming that the current rules are precluding lower-income borrowers from gaining a home loan. ANZ also recently canvassed 50-year mortgage terms, which would lower monthly loan repayments and entice more buyers

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Sydney housing should be declared a national disaster

Domain has released its house price results for the September quarter, which shows that median house price hit a record high of $1,655,000 following the seventh consecutive quarter gain. Sydney units also rose for the seventh consecutive quarter, hitting a record high of $815,300. As illustrated in the table below from Domain, Sydney’s median house

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The flying kleptocrat crash lands

Albo, or is that Klepto, is not amused: The cracks in Anthony Albanese’s glass jaw are splintering as he desperately looks for scapegoats and blames others for his own actions in defending accusations over Qantas upgrades and VIP treatment. Albanese was visibly rattled in a train wreck press conference on Tuesday where he rambled and sought to

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Rudd condemns a decade of Labor China treason

Throughout the last eight years of China pressuring Australia, the ALP has spent nearly all of its time blaming the LNP for the breakdown in the relationship. This blame came from all quarters, including Kevin07. The PM, former PMs, former and current foreign ministers, ministers, premiers, and wonks. Now, according to the mercurial Kevin07, they

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Tax cuts saved, no problem for rate cuts

The RBA has been aware of the possibility that consumer spending could be stronger than projected, especially given the significant boost to household income from the Stage 3 tax cuts. This would complicate their goal of sustainably returning inflation to target. The below video from Westpac provides an overview of the latest Westpac-DataX Consumer Panel.

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Stocks “coiled spring”

The Market Ear with stock internals. Oil at massive levels (again) Oil is trading around the massive $72 area again. We have dipped below the level on a few occasions, but these are make or break levels to watch. Refinitiv Oil and rates Oil and rates have moved in perfect tandem for a long time.

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Will Australia be “poor” without coal and gas?

The East Coast gas cartel continues to rort like it’s going out of style with gas prices glued above Albo failed $12Gj price cap even in the off-season: Leading directly to unseasonally high power prices: This makes statements yesterday by Barnaby Joyce rather interesting: Former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce says Australia will be “poor”

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Build-to-rent will worsen housing crisis

Build-to-rent (BTR) projects are large-scale residential developments, generally consisting of high-rise apartment blocks, in which all homes are owned and managed by a single business and rented out over a medium- to long-term period. BTR differs from the traditional build-to-sell model, in which a developer constructs an apartment complex and then sells off each individual

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Australians abandon dead-end university degrees

Data from the Department of Education shows there were a record 464,749 international students enrolled in Australian universities in the year to July 2024: While international enrolments have boomed, domestic enrolment applications collapsed to a decade low at the start of 2024: Meanwhile, new analysis from the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) shows that 25.4%

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Chalmers lies about more subsidies

The Albanese government promised to cut immigration to support wages. It promised a functional National Anti-Corruption Commission. It promised cheaper power bills. It promised more affordable housing. Now Treasurer Jim Chalmers says there will be no cost-of-living “free-for-all” in the lead up to the election, instead promising that responsible economic management would be the defining

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Costello defends his signature tax rort

Former Treasurer Peter Costello hit back at calls to curb property tax concessions, namely negative gearing and the capita gains tax discount (CGT). Costello introduced the 50% CGT discount in 1999 and defended the current tax settings in a speech last week to the Property Council of Australia’s annual congress in Townsville. “Interest on borrowings

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More iron ore hope

SHFE is going a second leg: With Dalian futures: The hope is captured by Goldman: NPC meeting November 4-8: The much anticipated bi-monthly National People’s Congress (NPC) standing committee meeting will take place during November 4-8. We expect the NPC to approve RMB1-2tn additional ultra-long-term central government special bond (ULT CGSB) issuance quota. In the

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Macro Morning

Last night was relatively calm for global risk markets although oil prices continued to fall from their weekend gap as Wall Street braces for a new round of earnings reports and the economic calendar begins to get busier in the latter half of the week. US stocks were able to close slightly higher while European

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Australian dollar only goes down

DXY is stable: AUD only goes down, though we should note that its uptrend is still intact: North Asia returns from whence it came: Goldmania, oilmageddon: Metals should follow the latter: Miners struggling: EM struggling: Junk nervous: Yields up, which is silly given oil. This trade is getting old: Stocks up: The runaway DXY is