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Trust me they are holiday homes, check out the other side of town, near the forum. LolThat would be Mandurah?
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And for clarification, it that the Bridge of Sighs or the Bridge of Size midview?
And the AUD dumps in response.RBA holds. Counting down to the rapid cuts...
And the AUD dumps in response.
am not so sure about the rapid cuts ( unless it is way too late when they start )RBA holds. Counting down to the rapid cuts...
Yeah, but, this time it's different...Dunno, history says that rapid hikes are followed by a plateau and then rapid cuts.... (both RBA & the Fed)
I don't know @frugal.rock.Yeah, but, this time it's different...
The inflation pond isn't quite out of ripples yet, imo. Not quite at the point of diminishing returns from rate rises.
And not a bad guess it is, however those scoundrels at OPEC seem to have succeeded in pushing up the POO, thus I think we will have another smaller ripple due to the continuing rising of energy costs.My guess, and it is a guess is that we are out of it, or near out of it.
And not a bad guess it is, however those scoundrels at OPEC seem to have succeeded in pushing up the POO, thus I think we will have another smaller ripple due to the continuing rising of energy costs.
-1.2 now.Sorta. -0.7% at the moment - I would say that's an expected move, not huge. AUDUSD has been in a range for the past few months. Besides, there are multiple factors that go into FX - I'm sure the worsening data coming out of China & South Korea are probably going to have a bigger impact compared to the IR differential, but who knows.
PLowe's still threatening the market with another possible hike. It's the same rhetoric coming out of the US.
On the one hand they still fear inflation is an issue - which IMO I think we will see an upwards MoM print thanks to crude's 20% rebound in the past month and the downstream effects it will have on the economy - yet they're worried about a measly 25bps hike? I mean, how much straw does this camel have on it's back that it can't take another strand?
There must be some other information out there that must be worrying them.
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Hopefully I shouldn't have to connect these two dots for everyone.
Houses are bought with credit, inflation pumps rates, rates make credit more expensive.But house prices go up with inflation? Max confuse
Yeah, but, this time it's different...
The inflation pond isn't quite out of ripples yet, imo. Not quite at the point of diminishing returns from rate rises.
Europe yes, china yes, USA no, but not for the interest-rate-rise reason you think.The Government has a contractive budget compared to the previous one that reduces money from the economy and secondly Australians are more susceptible to interest rate rises due to the fact variable rates are used for loans.
Though we are a percentage point below many other similar countries the above points aid the interest rate rises effectiveness over the short term.
We are on track to achieve the desired soft landing.
I reckon it will be a hard landing in those other countries.They have overcooked it.
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