Inflation stays at 2.1 per cent
The monthly inflation gauge came in significantly lower than expected at 2.1 per cent over the year to October.
Median market expectations were for a 2.3 per cent increase over the year.
However, it's worth noting that the headline figure was pushed down by a massive 35 per cent drop in heavily subsidised electricity prices.
The trimmed mean inflation figure remained stuck stubbornly above target at 3½ per cent over the year.
Inflation excluding volatile items continued to decline to 2.4 per cent over the year to October, having previously declined from 3 per cent in August to 2.7 per cent in September.
Progress has been bumpy, perhaps as one might have expected, but progress there has been.
Shane Wright from Fairfax took such a look at a few of the key disinflationary trends on X:
It looks like underlying rental price inflation, after stripping out the effect of the Commonwealth Rent Assistance, is ebbing lower now.
It's probably not smart to read too much into the first month of the quarter on this gauge, but there was nothing too alarming in here, and indeed there's been no headline inflation to speak of for six months.
CBA revised down their forecast for Q4 core inflation from 0.7 per cent to 0.6 per cent, with risks skewed to the downside.
Markets were largely unmoved by the figures, which were broadly as expected.
Construction picks up
Construction work done was a bit stronger than expected, with residential building work done just fractionally (0.1 per cent) higher than a year earlier in the September quarter.
House building has been strong in Western Australia and Queensland, and there has been a lift this year for apartment and townhouse building in Victoria.
That said, with medium-density projects costing up to around 50 per cent more than they did pre-pandemic, the same dollar value of work is producing far fewer units and apartments than it did before.
Overall, residential building remains quite subdued for the time being, but should hopefully begin to pick up in most areas next year (except perhaps in Sydney).
Engineering construction is much more ebullient and has lifted by a further 6 per cent over the past year, and is approaching decade highs.
Infrastructure and transport building has been enormously strong in New South Wales, and mining investment in Western Australia has also boomed along.
Markets weren't overly excited by the figures with the 3-year bond yield trading at just below 4 per cent this afternoon, and the Aussie dollar trading just a little higher at 64.8 US cents.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand wimped out of a super-sized rate cut and dropped interest rates by 50 basis points from 4.75 per cent to 4.25 per cent.
Base case scenario is 50 basis points for next month as well.
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As the 2025 election year draws closer, the government is beginning to splash some cash around, with the Help to Buy scheme now passing for up to 40,000 first homebuyers to be able to buy a property with a small deposit on a shared-equity basis.
I'm not sure this policy is popular as the government thinks it is, but the bill has been passed now anyway.
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