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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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The tragedy of Australian economic commentary

Elizabeth Knight is one of Australia’s best economic and business journalists, and she regularly writes informative, perceptive and lucid commentary on markets, the economy, and the actions of the corporate world. Knight is one of very few in the Nine world of whom you can assume you will read something intelligent. Her piece this week,

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Australian dollar plunges off recession cliff

DXY was stable overnight: AUD was blasted anyway: North Asia carry crashes are back: Oil broke closing technical support: Metals mayhem: Miners mauled: EM at the neckline: Junk hiccupping: Treasury curve through the roof: Stocks through the floor: US jobs were Goldilocks really: Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 142,000 in August, and the unemployment

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Iron ore smashed again as steel heads for Hades

SHFE and SGX were smashed this week: Overnight, Mad Dalian hit another new low: Coking coal is in free fall: Scuttlebutt is still terrible: In August, domestic steel demand weakened further, while steel production decreased, according to CSLPC. Iron ore’s slump comes as the China Iron & Steel Association advised mills against the impulse to

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Weekend Reading, media appearances and videos

International Reads: Kamala Harris’ magic number for revamping the corporate tax rate is nearly double what Trump is proposing – Fortune Goldman Sachs: Kamala Harris would be better for economy – NY Daily A Kamala Harris win and a Democratic sweep would give the biggest boost to the economy, Goldman Sachs says – QZ Germany

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Macro Afternoon

Asian share markets remain uncertain leading up to tonight’s US unemployment print with only local stocks advancing appreciably while currency markets tread water although the USD is starting to soften again. Yen remains on a tear while the Australian dollar remains surprisingly resilient as it extends above the 67 cent level. Oil futures are looking

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Reserve Bank continues to smash house prices

According to CoreLogic, home values across New Zealand fell by 0.5% in August, with Auckland seeing the biggest decline at 1.0%: On a quarterly basis, dwelling values declined by 2.2% across New Zealand, with falls recorded across all major markets: Home values have fallen 16.8% from their post-Covid peak, with Auckland (-21.8%) and Wellington (-21.5%)

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Betoota does the gas cartel

Somehow, it’s not as funny as usual. Australia, the world’s second largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG), is preparing to do what no one saw coming. Import gas for its own citizens. “Look, it’s simple economics,” said the government spokesperson. “We had a lot of gas. China and other countries needed gas. So, we

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Australia destroyer, Wayne Swan, returns

Wayne Swan taught Jim “chicken” Chalmers everything he knows: Former Labor federal treasurer Wayne Swan has backed the government’s attitude towards inflation, saying he is “very disappointed” in the Reserve Bank and it was “punching itself in the face.” Mr Wayne, who was Jim Chalmers‘s boss, slammed the RBA for “hammering households” with interest rates

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Aussies pull plug on battery EVs

Last week, the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) announced new energy supply and demand projections for the next decade. According to AEMO, a slower uptake of battery-electric vehicles (EVs) will reduce demand on the electrical system. In December, AEMO predicted that seven million electric vehicles would be sold over the following ten years, but that

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Labor are the new champions of public sector fat cats

While ordinary Australians are suffering through the worst cost-of-living crisis in generations and a record decline in household disposable incomes. The Albanese government is gifting fat salaries to senior public sector bureaucrats. A few months back, incoming Governor-General Sam Mostyn was awarded a 43% pay rise to $709,000 a year to compensate for a lack

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The ASX bubble inflates

What else can we call it? The multiple on the bourse is fast approaching COVID overvaluations. Even as earnings fall away and the outlook is no better as bulk commodity prices collapse. The bubble is led by banks: But is broad-based: Hilariously, it is better than elsewhere: Goldman has more. Misses out-numbered Beats (38% vs

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The economy is a river not a lake

A simple fact of macro management that Treasurer Dr Jim “chicken” Chalmers appears unaware of: Jim Chalmers has credited record government spending and Labor’s budget strategy for keeping Australia out of recession amid the weakest non-pandemic economic growth since 1991, using the data to reject the Reserve Bank’s claim the economy is “running too hot”.

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Housing czar spins international student lies

The chair of Australia’s National Housing Supply and Affordability Council, Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz, attacked the government’s planned caps for international students, claiming that it won’t ease the rental crisis and will endanger Australia’s second-largest export industry. Caps on international student numbers would likely have “very little effect” on housing supply, according to Ms Lloyd-Hurwitz. “Because students

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Here come more energy rebates

The RBA is about to lose the interest rate debate: Government subsidies for childcare, aged care and disability care have surged more than 20 per cent in the past year, but Labor has left the door open to more public spending ahead of the next election despite economists warning that this is unsustainable. Explosive growth

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AI prints money

The Market Ear on the AI money printer. This is not a bubble Goldman and BlackRock are both out with “thought-pieces” defending Tech in general and AI in specific. It is definitely not a bubble…..And at the same time Ilya raises $1bn at $5bn valuation with no business plan. Tech baby Goldman wants you to

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Jim Chalmers panics on economy, recession, and interest rates

Earlier this week, Treasurer Jim Chalmers publicly attacked the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), claiming that its restrictive monetary policy is “smashing the economy”. Chalmers’ salvo came about because he knew that if the RBA doesn’t start cutting rates, Labor faces the prospect of becoming a one-term government. On Thursday, I was interviewed by Bill

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$80 iron ore dead ahead

SHFE and SGX fell smartly yesterday. SGX bounced overnight: Mad Dalian did likewise: Coking coal too: Coking coal is down a very long way from the Ukraine War highs. Expect it to be sub-$100 before this is over: Scuttlebutt is instructive: “In contrast to last week’s mild rebound, iron ore futures in China started this

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Macro Morning

Again risk markets remain anxious leading up to tonight’s official US NFP print with a preview through the private ADP report and weekly initial jobless claims not settling the nerves despite no surprises. Treasury yields lifted again while Wall Street vacillated between losses and gains, with European shares still falling amid growth concerns. Commodity markets

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Australian dollar firms on weak US jobs

DXY fell overnight: Cutting AUD some slack: North Asia is up and away: Oil has the world’s ugliest chart despite OPEC output cuts: Metals will go down with it: Big miners are sitting ducks: EM is all washed up: Junk bullish! Yields plunging! Stocks don’t know if it is good news or bad: My view

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Bullock: Inflation (nearly) all Chalmers fault

Australia’s war between monetary and fiscal authorities is intensifying as Michelle Bullock fired back at her lost Treasurer: The key drivers of elevated inflation at the moment are housing costs and market services inflation, which remain above their average levels and have been easing only gradually. On the housing side, this reflects both construction cost

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Macro Afternoon

Asian share markets remain in a sea of caution leading up to tomorrow night’s US unemployment print with only local stocks advancing appreciably while currency markets tread water. Yen however remains on a tear due to some words of warning from the BOJ today. Commodities are still weak but this hasn’t hindered the Australian dollar

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Australia’s chief housing liar spreads more disinformation

New housing minister Clare O’Neil should be reported to the Albanese government’s disinformation register. Last month, O’Neil was accused of misleading parliament by making up expert evidence on the housing crisis: Last week, O’Neil then that “Australia is in a housing crisis because we have a housing shortage. To answer this crisis, our country needs to build