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HSBC chief economist Paul Bloxham said the figures suggested the labour market was โboth strong and continuing to tightenโ, and the data supported the case for interest rates to remain unchanged in February.
โFor the RBA, todayโs figures are good news as they surely remind them that they are still in the โnarrow pathwayโ of continued disinflation with an economy that is still close to, if not beyond, full employment,โ Bloxham said.
AMP deputy chief economist Diana Mousina said the โsolidโ figures didnโt make the case for cutting interest rates much clearer, and inflation data for the December quarter โ to be released on January 29 โ would be the โfinal piece in the interest rate debate puzzleโ.
BetaShares chief economist David Bassanese said the โimpressively resilient strengthโ of the labour market would support leaving interest rates unchanged.
As well as the big gains in banks and real estate shares, tech stocks also rebounded after a slump on Wednesday, pushed higher by WiseTech Global (up 2.6 per cent), Xero (up 1.5 per cent) and NextDC (up 2.9 per cent). Energy giants Woodside (up 0.2 per cent) and Santos (up 1 per cent) also rose.
Wall Street jumped on the back of the latest inflation data.Credit: AP
Healthcare giant Pro Medicus fell 0.4 per cent after an initial rise spurred by the companyโs announcement that it had a nine-year contract with the University of Kentucky worth $33 million. ResMed added 1.3 per cent, while CSL was down 0.3 per cent.
Neuren Pharmaceuticals (up 11.5 per cent) was the strongest performer in the ASX 200, jumping after sharing a positive trading update on Thursday morning, one day after announcing it had applied for its trofinetide medicine, used to treat a rare genetic disorder, to be used in Europe.
Betting agency Tabcorp (up 5.9 per cent) lifted after appointing Michael Fitzsimons โ executive director of wagering at the Hong Kong Jockey Club โ as its chief wagering officer.
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On Wall Street, the S&P 500 jumped 1.8 per cent. The Dow Jones rallied 703 points, or 1.7 per cent, and the Nasdaq composite leapt 2.5 per cent.
Few traders expect Wednesdayโs US inflation data to convince the Fed to cut its main interest rate at its meeting later this month, as it has done at three straight meetings since September. But economists and analysts say it could open the door for cuts later in the year, maybe even in March, if more data comes in to show that upward pressure on inflation is abating.
โPerhaps the key takeaway is that markets are likely to be whip-sawed over the next few data releases as investors seek a narrative that they can be comfortable with for more than just a few days at a time,โ said Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management.
Wall Street has been lurching down and up for weeks as traders tear up their forecasts for what the Fed will do with interest rates in 2025. A further easing would boost the US economy and prices for investments, but it could also give inflation more fuel.
Traders were ebullient last year about the possibility of a string of cuts to rates, only to rein in their expectations more recently. The Fed itself has indicated it may cut rates only twice this year instead of the four times it had earlier projected, and some traders have even considered the possibility of future hikes to rates.
Wednesdayโs update quashed speculation about hikes in the near term, and Treasury yields eased in the bond market on growing hopes for coming cuts.
with AP
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