You will recall that Australia’s October monthly CPI indicator from the Australian Bureau of Statistics came in below market expectations at 4.9%/yr (versus the consensus of 5.2%/yr). There were a number of factors which messed with the data, as I discussed in a previous show.
According to CBA, other surveys also suggest that trimmed mean CPI in Q4 23 is unlikely to be stronger than the RBA’s ~1.0%/qtr forecast.
But these monthly numbers are flaky, because the critical services price movements are not captured until the quarterly series which is due out in January.
As I discussed in my earlier show, the problem is the last mile problem – in that the last part of getting inflation down towards the target is the hardest, especially when then RBA now has a 2.5% central target, and as in the US data out yesterday, its services inflation which is driving the numbers as goods inflation eases back.
On this theme, Statistics New Zealand on Wednesday released its new monthly inflation gauge, which captures around 45% of the CPI basket.
The conclusion of all this, is the partial monthly numbers may well deceive, and should be taken with a truck load of salt. When the quarterly numbers land later then check out the services components. Goods price inflation may be coming under control, but services is not. And within that, watch the rental and housing sector in particular.
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