Are We Being Lied To?

The currently running Senate inquiry into bank branch closures has flushed out that while banks are claiming they are following their customers into a digital future, actually, they ae rather setting that agenda, removing ATMS and Branches and forcing people to go digital, whether they want to or not.

And some banks have all but admitted they are fudging the figures, to buttress their strategy, never mind the impact on real customers.

While politicians are keen to step back from the argument on the basis banks are commercial entities and should be able to make what ever strategic decisions they want, the truth is banks are a government protected species, who have received massive financial support from us tax-payers via the Term Funding Facility and other measures.

And to reinforce the argument that we are being lied to, according to a news.com.au exclusive article, a former ANZ employee has alleged that the bank is forcing customers out of branches and then using their absence to justify branch closures.

https://www.news.com.au/finance/business/banking/whistleblower-alleges-anz-is-deliberately-pushing-customers-out-of-branches/news-story/8e359187d61ca1ad77552db45fc47168

Phillip, a pseudonym told news.com.au that during the time he worked at an ANZ branch in a metropolitan area, staff were directed not to serve customers who came to the branch.

http://www.martinnorth.com/

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DFA Live Q&A HD Replay: Leith van Onselen: Economics Now!

https://youtu.be/vevHHC1yP50

This is an edited version of a live discussion with Leith van Onselen, Chief Economist at Nucleus Wealth, and co-founder of Macrobusiness. Leith has been leading the charge in highlighting how high migration is killing the property market. Tonight we look at the latest economic trends, and also will compare New Zealand with Australia.

Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/

When Hype And Reality Collide….

This is our weekly market update.

Here is the big question. Are U.S. stocks poised to continue their dramatic run, or is a pause ahead? That’s the question investors are asking as the S&P 500 heads into the close of the year with fresh highs possibly coming into view. A softer tone to U.S. economic data this week has fueled rate-cuts bets, pushing Treasury yields down and lifting equity markets. For the week, the S&P 500 added 2.2% while the Nasdaq composite rose 2.4% and the Dow climbed 1.9%.

This extended a rally that has seen the S&P 500 gain over 9% since late October. The index is now up nearly 18% for the year and less than 2% away from its year-high, reached in July. Its record closing level, from January 2022, is some 6% away.

Whether it can reach those levels in coming weeks depends in-part on how convinced investors are that the U.S. economy is on track for a so-called soft landing, where the Fed brings down inflation without badly damaging growth. So far, the economy has proven resilient in the face of tighter monetary policy, though some measures of employment and consumer demand have softened.

Leading global investors expect inflation and interest rates to remain high well into next year and are bracing for more volatile sharemarkets where easy returns will be hard to find.

Top fund managers, company founders and superannuation funds told the Sohn Hearts & Minds event at the Sydney Opera House on Friday that they were looking beyond big name, overpriced Wall Street stocks that would struggle to deliver growth.

Instead, investors willing to gamble on unloved and unpopular stocks would do best, they said. Many investors warn there is a huge insolvency risk lurking in private markets.

http://www.martinnorth.com/

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How To Stop The Central Bankers’ Power Grab!

Time to act to save Australia from the Central Bankers’ Power grab. I discuss the impending legislation which would disable Parliament’s power to intervene on what the RBA does; with Robbie Barwick from the Australian Citizens Party.

We need to register our opposition to the bill which is being snuck in via the back-door of cross-party consensus. The very future of Australia as a democratic country is at stake. Call and email now!

Breaking news! Treasurer Jim Chalmers is preparing to introduce a bill to implement the RBA Review recommendations, including removing democratic accountability over the Reserve Bank, in two weeks – the last week of November.

Don’t let the major parties do a back-room deal to wave this bill through!

Help fight to protect the most important democratic protection in Australian law by calling and emailing three people immediately:

  1. Treasurer Jim Chalmers: Electorate (07) 3299 5910; Parliament House (02) 6277 7340; Email: Jim.Chalmers.MP@aph.gov.au
  2. Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor: Electorate (02) 4658 7188; Parliament House (02) 6277 4362; Email: Angus.Taylor.MP@aph.gov.au
  3. Your local Member of Parliament – click here to find your local MP’s details: https://www.aph.gov.au/Senators_and_Members/Members

Tell them they have no right to repeal Section 11 of the RBA Act, which would give up the power of democratic accountability over the RBA and the banking system that political giants in history like John Curtin and Ben Chifley fought so hard to establish.

Robbie’s earlier video : https://youtu.be/EA7FhBZxfuM

http://www.martinnorth.com/

The RBA May Have More To Do – If You Believe The Employment Numbers!

Australian employment came in much stronger than expected in October while the jobless rate edged higher as more people sought work, suggesting the RBA may have more to do to cool demand and inflation.

As Warren Hogan said: The RBA released updated economic forecasts less than a week ago which were finalised on 7 November – 9 days ago. They forecast employment growth in Dec 2023 of 2.5%. After todays labour force numbers they need employment to fall by 10k in each of November and December to achieve this. If you use quarter average YoY then you need an even bigger fall – something like a net fall of 50k in Nov/Dec. either way the economy keeps surprising on upside and their models will be screaming higher rates. It is their judgement and/or the board that is holding rates down.

On the other hand, a Sluggish increases in hours worked and declining job ads suggest that demand for workers is weakening along with the economy. Given record growth in the working-age population, something will have to give.

That said, Markets largely shrugged off the data. “Today’s figures don’t provide enough of a ‘smoking gun’ for a follow-up rate hike at the December board meeting and that seems to also be the market reaction,” said Diana Mousina, deputy chief economist at AMP Ltd.

“Another rate hike is still a possibility for February 2024 after the next round of quarterly inflation data, but we think the macroeconomic environment will be weaker” by then, she said.

New RBA Governor Michele Bullock recently described the labor market as “not as tight as it was,” noting that some leading indicators such as job vacancies have begun to ease from high levels.

But when you examine the data, we have more questions than answered, and as I discussed on my Tuesday live show, I wonder if the data as presented by the ABS really portrays the current state of employment. My surveys suggest that people are grabbing extra hours and jobs where they can, to help alleviate the costs of living, and of course with population growing thanks to high migration, we need at least 22,000 new jobs each month, just to stand still.

My best guess is the ABS is not picking up the huge immigration surge quickly enough. It is clear the labour market has dramatically loosened. As I say, something will have to give.

http://www.martinnorth.com/

Oooch! Wages Up, But Still Below Inflation!

Australian wages accelerated at the fastest pace in over 14 years in the three months through September and reached the Reserve Bank’s forecast peak, while still remaining well below the inflation rate. So in real terms average Australian wages continue to go backwards, against inflation at 5.4%. And productivity improvements are nowhere to be seen, as migration continues at a record pace and unit labour costs rise.

The ABS says the Wage Price Index rose 4% in the third quarter from a year earlier, above economists’ expectations of 3.9% and matching the RBA’s forecast for year’s end, On a quarterly basis, wages grew 1.3%, the highest in the 26-year history of the index.

Annually, seasonally adjusted private sector wages growth was higher than the public sector (4.2% compared to 3.5%). This was the highest annual growth for the private sector since December quarter 2008 and for the public sector since June 2011.

One of the reasons that economists expect Australia will avoid the sort of wage-price spiral that has erupted in some other developed countries is surging immigration that is boosting labor supply and likely reducing the bargaining power of employees.

http://www.martinnorth.com/

Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/

Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants.

Housing Affordability Stinks…

We look at the latest analysis of housing affordability, based on a range of data, and conclude that it has rarely been worse. In addition, some players are being highly selective in the way they present the data, understating the true picture for many households. We wonder why?

http://www.martinnorth.com/

Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/

Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants.

Households In The Cross-Hairs As Real Wealth Falls…

The latest from the RBA – Statement On Monetary Policy November 2023, outlines the bank’s latest thinking. The Reserve Bank updated its economic forecasts, which explain why it raised interest rates this month – from 4.1 per cent to 4.35 per cent after four consecutive pauses. And importantly, it shows just how the economic engine is misfiring, with households very much on the front line.

While the business sector, overall, appears to be doing fine, it appears working-age households will continue to do the heavy lifting on containing inflation via higher interest payments, cutting their individual consumption and falls in real wages that are expected to continue until the middle of next year. And due to the combination of stubbornly high inflation and relatively weak income growth, the RBA now expects real household disposable income — a key measure of living standards — to keep sliding sharply until the second half of next year.

And to underscore this, recent OECD data shows that Australian households have suffered the biggest fall in real per capita household disposable income of any advanced economy over the past year. In the 12 months to June, Australian household incomes slumped 5.1 per cent, the sharpest fall recorded across the OECD.

Real view management of the monetary settings from the RBA are simply not working.

https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/smp/2023/nov/

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Save Cash: Do It Now! With Robbie Barwick…

Following the Optus outage this week, the Senate has launched an Inquiry into the issue and impact. One element to the fore was the lack of access to cash thanks to recent bank branch and ATM closures and some businesses choosing to go digital only. Useless when the network or power goes out.

So we need to make sure the Government hears from us about the essential utility of cash, and that they need to legislate to protect access and acceptance of it.

So make a submission to the current inquiry, deadline for which is 17th November.

https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Environment_and_Communications/OptusNetworkOutage

Use your voice to make sure our elected officials get the message. Access to cash is a requirement, and it needs to be protected – as a safeguard to democracy!

http://www.martinnorth.com/

Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/

Cash Remains King In An Outage (So Let’s Protect It!)

Optus’ network failures have again highlighted the risks to the community when technology breaks. There were structural reasons why the failures happened, but the fallout was significant.

This brings the need to ensure access to cash is enshrined in law in Australia into sharp contrast again. This has already happened in a number of other countries.

The Change.org petition https://www.change.org/p/an-australian-cash-and-banking-guarantee has more than 130,000 signatures, and I encourage my followers to sign up.

We cannot be held hostage to a digital future which is intrinsically unreliable.

http://www.martinnorth.com/

Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/