AUD/USD rallies across the board RBA following a CPI beat. Trimmed Mean CPI QoQ: 0.4% vs 0.4% expected and prior 0.3%. RBA Trimmed Mean CPI YoY: 1.6% vs 1.5% expected (slightly bullish) vs 1.6% prior. Following yet another Chinese manufacturing data that arrived in contraction territory, for AUD traders, the latest Consumer Price Index numbers have come out. Q2 CPI was expected to rise 0.5% QoQ, 1.5% YoY with the trimmed mean up 0.4% QoQ, 1.5% YoY. There were little expectations for the data to come anywhere close for a positive input for the Aussie as it is evident that there was very little inflationary pressure in the Australian economy. However, it will draw much attention as it is the week’s most significant local economic release following after RBA governor Philip Lowe last week suggesting that Australians should “expect an extended period of low rates” despite strong employment growth and a low jobless rate. His announcement helped to further weaken the Australian dollar, which last week dropped 1.8 per cent against the greenback. The Aussie dropped a further -.68% since the start of this week. The data arrived as follows: RBA Trimmed Mean CPI QoQ: 0.4% vs 0.4% expected and prior 0.3%. RBA Trimmed Mean CPI YoY: 1.6% vs 1.5% expected (slightly bullish) vs 1.6% prior. Consumer Price Index QoQ: 0.6% vs 0.5% expected and 0.0% prior. Consumer Price Index YoY: 1.6% vs 1.5% expected and 1.3% prior. The data is a slight relief to Aussie bulls, but given the prospects of a dovish RBA, bulls will need to hold their horses as we head into the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision. About the Consumer Price Index The Consumer Price Index released by the RBA and republished by the Australian Bureau of Statistics is a measure of price movements by the comparison between the retail prices of a representative shopping basket of goods and services. The trimmed mean is calculated as the weighted mean of the central 70% of the quarterly price change distribution of all CPI components, with the annual rates based on compounded quarterly calculations. FX Street FX Street FXStreet is the leading independent portal dedicated to the Foreign Exchange (Forex) market. It was launched in 2000 and the portal has always been proud of their unyielding commitment to provide objective and unbiased information, to enable their users to take better and more confident decisions. View All Post By FX Street FXStreet News share Read Next AUD/JPY surges +20 pips as Aussie CPI beats expectations FX Street 4 years AUD/USD rallies across the board RBA following a CPI beat. Trimmed Mean CPI QoQ: 0.4% vs 0.4% expected and prior 0.3%. RBA Trimmed Mean CPI YoY: 1.6% vs 1.5% expected (slightly bullish) vs 1.6% prior. Following yet another Chinese manufacturing data that arrived in contraction territory, for AUD traders, the latest Consumer Price Index numbers have come out. Q2 CPI was expected to rise 0.5% QoQ, 1.5% YoY with the trimmed mean up 0.4% QoQ, 1.5% YoY. There were little expectations for the data to come anywhere close for a positive input for the Aussie as it is evident that… Regulated Forex Brokers All Brokers Sponsored Brokers Broker Benefits Min Deposit Score Visit Broker 1 $100T&Cs Apply 0% Commission and No stamp DutyRegulated by US,UK & International StockCopy Successfull Traders 9.8 Visit Site FreeBets Reviews$100Your capital is at risk. 2 T&Cs Apply 9.8 Visit Site FreeBets Reviews$100Your capital is at risk. 3 Recommended Broker $100T&Cs Apply No deposit or withdrawal feesTrade major forex pairs such as EUR/USD with leverage up to 30:1 and tight spreads of 0.9 pips Low $100 minimum deposit to open a trading account 9 Visit Site FreeBets ReviewsYour capital is at risk. 4 T&Cs Apply Visit Site FreeBets ReviewsYour capital is at risk. 5 Recommended Broker $0T&Cs Apply Trade gold, silver, and platinum directly against major currenciesUp to 1:500 leverage for forex trading24/5 customer service by phone and email 9 Visit Site FreeBets ReviewsYour capital is at risk.