A set of analysts have updated / published their Eurozone HICP forecasts over the weekend ahead of tomorrow's bloc-wide print after Friday's releases for the "big four". There has been little change on net with headline tracking between 2.1 to 2.2% Y/Y while core is still expected at 2.4% Y/Y. Despite the limited changes, note also that Deutsche Bank have pushed back the timing of the first rate hike from end-2026 to mid-2027.
A reminder that our own tracker for tomorrow's Eurozone-wide headline HICP print sits at 2.11% on an unrounded basis. Our full preview for the print meanwhile is here. Later today we are due to receive Irish HICP with the Netherlands and Austria both due to release prints on Tuesday ahead of the pan-Eurozone data.
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Aussie 10-yr futures slipped lower Wednesday on the back of hotter-than-expected Australian inflation. This returned prices lower despite nascent signs of a technical recovery as recently as last week. The sustainability of the pullback will be dependent on prices holding above key short-term support at 95.510, the Sep 3 low. Near-term resistance remains 95.780, the Sep 12 high. A clear break of this level signals scope for a continuation higher and opens 95.960, the 76.4% retracement level for the Sep’24 - Nov’24 downleg.
Having bounced well on the back of the mild US CPI print, Aussie 3-yr futures reversed course Wednesday on strong domestic inflation data containing RBA cut pricing through 2026. This keeps prices well below prior resistance at 96.615, the Sep 12 high, and refocuses attention on 96.280 as the next major support.
Gov Waller, one of the FOMC's more prominent doves, makes clear in an appearance on Fox Business that he supports a follow-up rate cut in December. He makes reference to Chair Powell's press conference comment that the Fed could skip a cut at the December meeting due in part to a lack of official government data during the federal shutdown (Powell: “what do you do if you are driving in the fog? You slow down").