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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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Extreme greed arrives

The Market Ear on extreme greed! Say hello to extreme greed We are back in extreme greed land, trading at the most “greedy” levels since Feb 2024. Source: MacroMicro Finally Bulls getting excited and bears starting to give up. Not at extreme levels, but getting closer. Source: LSEG Workspace Nets catch up Net leverage for

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Macro Morning

Overnight saw the passage of the Trump regime’s Big Bloody Awful Bill for the middle/working class by the Republican controlled Congress, but this was overshadowed by a surprisingly upbeat NFP print that negated the negative ADP print the session before. While the BBB will lead to the near permanent destruction of low/middle America it is

11

Macro Afternoon

Stock markets were doing well in Asia until it seemed like a leak of tonight’s US unemployment print by Trump spitting his dummy calling for Fed Chair Powell’s resignation. This saw most equities pull back alongside S&P futures while the USD firmed against the undollars, with Yen easing off as speculation the BOJ may raise

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Is AI a productivity disaster?

The St Louis Fed recently did an interesting AI survey that suggested the benefits of AI are large in certain areas but far from uniform. For each generative AI user, we computed the percentage of working hours saved as the ratio of time saved in the previous week to hours worked in that same week.

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Australia’s trade suplus going, going…

Gone through 2026. The ABS. The seasonally adjusted balance on goods decreased $2,621m in May. Goods credits (exports) decreased $1,168m (2.7%) driven by Non-rural goods. Goods debits (imports) increased $1,453m (3.8%) driven by Capital goods. The year has been OK for exports because most of the bulk commodity falls have been in coal, which is largely

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When could Aussie housing be affordable?

If we imagine for a moment that pigs had little wings and made their home in the skies, and governments would do nothing to attempt to boost property prices even as they flatlined or grew at a level consistent with the CPI, we can credibly forecast a scenario in which housing would be on the

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MB Fund Podcast: FY2025 In Review

In this week’s podcast, Nucleus Wealth’s Chief Investment Officer, Damien Klassen looked through what worked in 2025, what didn’t and where we are opening 2026. View the presentation slides Can’t make it to the live series? Catch up on the content via Podcasts or our recorded Videos. Damien Klassen is Chief Investment Officer at the Macrobusiness Fund, which is

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Aussies exodus explodes from one city

In the nation’s collective consciousness, there is the narrative that there is a city experiencing a nation-beating exodus, where outflows of its residents are on the road to being biblical in their scale. That city is Melbourne. In the years since the pandemic began, the perception of the bayside city has changed dramatically, from one

1

BTFD, again, and again

The Market Ear with the charts. Buy the dip BTD has been very strong in 2025. As we have been outlining for weeks, this still has a lot of 2020 flavor to it. BofA LSEG Workspace Gross Grossing up… GS Short suckers Market is “sucking shorts” out of the market. This is a longer term

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Australian dollar baulks at US recession

DXY held its ground last night. So did AUD. Lead boots are marching on. Oil had a little pop going into OPEC. Another copper bubble is here. Big miners ripped within the monster bear. EM yawn. Junk yawn. The curve flattened on bad data. Stocks only go up. ADP was our before tomorrow’s BLS and

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Macro Morning

Last night saw the release of the latest US private jobs data which shocked with only a 33K increase over an expected 100K plus, which puts tonight’s NFP print into clear perspective and shows the employment market may not be as robust as Fed Chair Powell thinks. Wall Street ignored the print and focused on

16

Macro Afternoon

A relatively calm session here in Asia with only slight movements in currency markets as the Australian dollar had a small blip after some disappointing retail sales numbers while share markets are absorbing the passing of the “End of the Empire” bill in the US senate. Oil markets continue to steady after their recent correction

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Reserve bank says “no” to rate cut

In the past week, New Zealand’s financial markets have been primarily influenced by global events, with little guidance provided by local data. Markets continue to anticipate that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will skip a cut at the next meeting on July 9 and then cut rates again in August. The RBNZ has already

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Sack Rudd now

Failing US ambassador Kevin Rudd yesterday met with failing foreign affairs minister Penny Wong. Here is the happy couple responsible for a sharp deterioration in the US alliance. A nastier pair of beearches you are unlikely to meet. The failed Rudd now requires the support of the foreign minister to get his job done. Penny

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The per capita retail recession returns

In the run up to the latest Australian retail sales data analysts were expecting a sizable +0.4% month on month bounce, after April saw nominal retail sales fall by 0.1% on a seasonally adjusted basis. In reality, retail sales rose by just 0.18% in May, marking yet another weak report for the nation’s retail economy.