Economic calendar in Asia Wednesday, 27 September – BOJ minutes, Australian inflation data
<p>After the big stock market(s) slump in US time on Tuesday its unlikely to be quite so dramatic a session here. </p><p>The inflation data from Australia is the monthly result for August. The monthly data is not the official CPI rate, that's the quarterly data not due until October 25. Still, it'll be of interest to the RBA although unlikely to shift them from their current on hold sance. </p><ul><li><a href="https://www.forexlive.com/centralbank/inflation-data-is-due-from-australia-mid-week-preview-20230925/" target="_blank" rel="follow" data-article-link="true">Inflation data is due from Australia mid-week – preview</a></li></ul><p>As for the BOJ, it seems there is nothing on the planet that'll shift them from their on-hold stance. Easy does it for them. Perhaps the (July) minutes will give as a clue of changes way off in the distance, but I doubt it. The July meeting was when the Bank said it'd allow 10-year JGB yields out to 1%, but Bank officials have been at pains to explain the move so the minutes are unlikely to add much to understadning.</p><ul><li>
This
snapshot from the ForexLive economic data calendar, <a href="https://www.forexlive.com/EconomicCalendar">access
it here</a>.</li><li>
The
times in the left-most column are GMT. </li><li>
The
numbers in the right-most column are the 'prior' (previous
month/quarter as the case may be) result. The number in the column
next to that, where there is a number, is the consensus median
expected.</li></ul>
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.
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