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It's Halloween on Wealth Wine and Wisdom, and after a quick shout-out to the wine and an important scam alert from Fenton, the hosts dive into the week's critical economic topics.
Jason delivers the property stats, noting nationwide low vacancy rates (under 1% in Sydney and Brisbane) and persistently rising asking prices, signaling no immediate slowdown for the market.
Fenton drills into the recent spike in Australian CPI (inflation) data, challenging the clickbait journalism that warns of rate hikes. He connects the inflation increase—driven by electricity, petrol, and housing costs—directly to government interference and subsidies (e.g., net zero policies, first-home buyer grants), arguing that market fundamentals still point to potential interest rate cuts.
The episode wraps up by celebrating some "Good News" stories: big construction builders are back in the black, Melbourne University is ranked top in Australia, and Victoria has achieved positive interstate migration for the first time in 20 years.
However, the mood shifts as the duo discusses the future of Australia's massive $3.7 Trillion Superannuation fund and recent changes in its definition, cautioning investors to pay close attention to the government's next moves. Plus, a look at the energy-hungry rise of data centers as a hot new commercial real estate market.
By Andy Fenton, Jason WhittonIt's Halloween on Wealth Wine and Wisdom, and after a quick shout-out to the wine and an important scam alert from Fenton, the hosts dive into the week's critical economic topics.
Jason delivers the property stats, noting nationwide low vacancy rates (under 1% in Sydney and Brisbane) and persistently rising asking prices, signaling no immediate slowdown for the market.
Fenton drills into the recent spike in Australian CPI (inflation) data, challenging the clickbait journalism that warns of rate hikes. He connects the inflation increase—driven by electricity, petrol, and housing costs—directly to government interference and subsidies (e.g., net zero policies, first-home buyer grants), arguing that market fundamentals still point to potential interest rate cuts.
The episode wraps up by celebrating some "Good News" stories: big construction builders are back in the black, Melbourne University is ranked top in Australia, and Victoria has achieved positive interstate migration for the first time in 20 years.
However, the mood shifts as the duo discusses the future of Australia's massive $3.7 Trillion Superannuation fund and recent changes in its definition, cautioning investors to pay close attention to the government's next moves. Plus, a look at the energy-hungry rise of data centers as a hot new commercial real estate market.

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