确认您不是来自美国或菲律宾

在此声明,本人明确声明并确认:
  • 我不是美国公民或居民
  • 我不是菲律宾居民
  • 本人没有直接或间接拥有美国居民10%以上的股份/投票权/权益,和/或没有通过其他方式控制美国公民或居民。
  • 本人没有直接或间接的美国公民或居民10%以上的股份/投票权/权益的所有权,和/或受美国公民或居民其他任何方式行使的控制。
  • 根据FATCA 1504(a)对附属关系的定义,本人与美国公民或居民没有任何附属关系。
  • 我知道做出虚假声明所需付的责任。
就本声明而言,所有美国附属国家和地区均等同于美国的主要领土。本人承诺保护Octa Markets Incorporated及其董事和高级职员免受因违反本声明而产生或与之相关的任何索赔。
我们致力于保护您的隐私和您个人信息的安全。我们只收集电子邮件,以提供有关我们产品和服务的特别优惠和重要信息。通过提交您的电子邮件地址,您同意接收我们的此类信件。如果您想取消订阅或有任何问题或疑虑,请联系我们的客户支持。
Octa trading broker
开通交易账户
Back

Australian CPI Preview: Forecasts from seven major banks, vindicating the RBA’s dovish approach

Australian Consumer Price Index (CPI) figures are due on Wednesday, October 26 at 00:30 GMT and as we get closer to the release time, here are forecasts from economists and researchers of seven major banks regarding the upcoming inflation data.

The headline inflation is set to accelerate to 7.0% vs. the prior release of 6.1% on an annual basis. If so, headline would be the highest since Q2 1990 and further above the 2-3% target range. Meanwhile, Q3 Trimmed Mean is expected at 5.6% year-on-year vs. 4.9% in Q2. Quarter-on-quarter inflation is expected at 1.5%.

ANZ

“We have lifted our Q3 trimmed mean inflation forecast to 1.6% QoQ (previous forecast: 1.4% QoQ), which represents a modest acceleration from the Q2 pace, but left our headline inflation forecast unchanged at 1.6% QoQ. This would see annual inflation reach 7.0% YoY for headline and 5.6% YoY for trimmed mean in Q3. This would not be inconsistent with the RBA’s current Q4 picks of 7.75% YoY and 6% YoY respectively. An upside surprise would be problematic for the RBA after it slowed the pace of hiking in October, but a 25 bps cash rate hike in November still seems the most likely outcome in this case. It would make a move in December more likely than we currently anticipate though.”

Westpac

“We forecast a 1.1% print, lifting the annual pace from 0.4% to 6.5%. The reason for the step down from 1.8% print in Q2 is the significant state energy rebates, particularly in WA and Victoria. Due to these rebates, utility cost are forecast to fall 10.5% subtracting 0.48% from the September quarter CPI. Without the rebates, our CPI forecast would have been 1.8%. The Trimmed Mean is forecast to lift 1.5% in September, matching the March and June quarters, taking the annual pace to 5.6% YoY from 4.9%, well up from the March 2021 low of 1.1% YoY. Our forecast peak is 5.8% YoY in December 2022.” 

ING

“We don’t think the 6.1% inflation reading in Q2 22 was the peak, and look for the inflation rate to increase to 6.4% YoY, following a 1.0% QoQ increase. The Reserve Bank of Australia has already stated that it expects inflation to rise further, so this doesn’t necessarily imply any deviation from their recent slower pace of tightening at forthcoming meetings, or for that matter, the outlook for the AUD.”

TDS

“We expect a more dovish headline CPI print at 1.3% due to the significant offset from the rebates and lower pump prices. However, trimmed-mean CPI may stay elevated at 1.6% QoQ as broader price pressures are still brewing, especially in the housing and food categories. Unless trimmed-mean inflation surprises strongly higher, we expect the RBA to stick with 25 bps hikes till March 2023.”

NAB

“We forecast headline of 1.3% QoQ and 6.7% YoY. For the more closely watched core trimmed mean measure, we look for an increase of 1.6% QoQ and 5.7% YoY. For the November RBA meeting, we expect a 25 bps hike, but a shift back to 50 bps cannot be fully discounted if the CPI surprises sufficiently high and broad.”

SocGen

“Headline and core (i.e., trimmed mean) inflation are likely to have risen further in  Q322 (1.3% and 1.5%, respectively), which would continue to support the RBA’s rate-hike campaign.  Trimmed mean and weighted median inflation may also rise further in YoY terms (5.6% and 4.7%), confirming the broad-based nature of the ongoing rise in inflation. We expect an additional jump in Q4 22 headline inflation, as retail electricity prices should finally rise to reflect the recent energy price increase in Q4.”

Citibank

“Australia’s CPI should see headline and underlying CPI rise by 1.6% over the quarter, implying a yearly reading of 7% and 5.4%, respectively. But the bar for a hawkish surprise for the RBA is high because the Bank already has bullish year-end inflation forecasts for headline and underlying CPI at 7.8% and 6%, respectively.”

The breadth of the USD move will extend its reaches – TDS

The question on most investors' minds is when will the USD peak and what are the catalysts? The USD could reinforce recent gains until the Fed pivots
了解更多 Previous

USD/JPY drops sharply below 148.00 on USD weakness

The USD/JPY is falling on Tuesday on no signs of interventions and driven by a weaker US Dollar across the board. The pair is trading under 148.00 aft
了解更多 Next