Image Source: PixabayJuly headline inflation dropped from 3.8% in June to 3.5% YoY in July, though this was slightly higher than the consensus view (consensus 3.4%, ING f 3.5%). However, core measures of inflation came in lower and may offer more hope that inflation is finally beginning to respond to higher rates.
Better news on inflation for the Reserve Bank of Australia
Although the headline index of inflation for July did not fall as much as the consensus had hoped for, declining only to 3.5% YoY from 3.8% in June, there is a lot to be optimistic about in this latest set of inflation data.
Core inflation measures are now falling again
Source: CEIC, ING
Markets are dwelling on the negatives
The market response to this data is slightly odd, and while an end-of-year rate cut is still more than fully priced in, the implied yield for December has risen slightly. It looks like markets are more agitated by the slight upside miss to the headline index than accepting that the underlying story seems to be improving. This is not the first time we have been at odds with the market’s interpretation of events, and we still think a December rate cut looks unlikely. That said, we are encouraged by this latest data, which we think makes a first-quarter 2025 cut look less speculative than it had been looking. It would be helpful now to see some supportive data from the activity side of the economy, most notably the labour market, to reinforce today’s encouraging underlying inflation story. However, the next labour release is not until 19 September. We do, however, get 2Q24 GDP data on 4 September, which could help make the case for a cooler economy and a lower inflation outlook.
“Run-rate” (annualized) CPI measures
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