5 in 5 with ANZ
5 in 5 with ANZ
Thursday: Services inflation to worry RBA
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Thursday: Services inflation to worry RBA

Australian services inflation remains sticky as headline CPI drops within RBA target band; Aussie and Kiwi dollars fall from fresh 2024 highs; ANZ's Raymond Yeung on risk of 'lost decade' in China

Australian inflation drops within the RBA’s target band for the first time since October 2021, but sticky services prices could be a concern. The Aussie and Kiwi dollars are down about 1% after hitting fresh 2024 highs yesterday. Services inflation also remains sticky in Japan.

In part two of a bonus Deep Dive interview on China’s stimulus drive, ANZ Chief Economist for Greater China Raymond Yeung explains the risks of not doing more, including the prospect of a Japan-style ‘lost decade’.

5 things to know:

  1. the US dollar strengthened in late trading overnight, pushing the Aussie dollar down 0.9% at 4am Sydney/Melbourne time. The Aussie had earlier hit a 2024 high above 69 US cents. ANZ Head of FX Research Mahjabeen Zaman says a number of factors are in play for the Aussie to hold near current levels.

  2. The Kiwi dollar was also down about 1% after hitting a new 2024 high yesterday. Mahjabeen says while New Zealand economic data has been mixed, Q2 GDP wasn’t as weak as expected and stronger dairy prices have supported the currency recently.

  3. Annual inflation in Australia fell 0.8 percentage points to 2.7% in August, according to the partial indicator - the first time inflation has been within the RBA’s 2-3% target band since October 2021. ANZ Senior Economist Catherine Birch says the drop was driven by federal and state government energy rebates.

  4. Catherine says even that fall in the underlying, trimmed mean measure might not be enough to shift a hawkish RBA due to sticky services inflation and a need to see quarterly data in October.

  5. The US dollar also rose one percent against the Yen overnight. In Japan yesterday, producer prices in the services industry rose 2.7% from a year ago in August - slightly above expectations but below the 2.8% in July. Mahjabeen says this indicates sticky services inflation remains, which could support a Bank of Japan hike in October.

Cheers

Bernard

PS: Catch you tomorrow with a look ahead to US PCE inflation data, which will give the first real clue on how big the Fed’s next rate cut might be.

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5 in 5 with ANZ
5 in 5 with ANZ
A daily podcast hosted by Bernard Hickey that gives you the five things you need to know about the global economy and markets in under five minutes. Plus a deep dive into emerging trends and issues featuring ANZ's global team of experts.