The nation's biggest bank says household spending in April was 1 per cent lower than in March, and had only increased by 2.6 per cent over the previous 12 months – comfortably lower than inflation.
Landlords have been warned to lift their game during tax time, with the ATO revealing nine out of every 10 people who own a rental property get their returns wrong.
Inflation has continued to slow, but not as much as the market had expected, likely delaying when the Reserve Bank will be able to pass down an interest rate cut.
Macquarie Bank has been slapped with a $10 million penalty for its lack of controls to detect and prevent unauthorised fee transactions conducted by third parties, such as financial advisors.
The figure would still see up to around 100,000 homeowners falling behind on their mortgage payments by October unless interest rates ease or their wages increase.
Borrowers hoping for an interest rate cut - or a timeline of when variable rates may come down - were given little by a central bank patiently awaiting new data.
Exactly two months out from budget night, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said there'll be no repeat of the surging revenue from high resource prices that drove last year's record surplus.
Australian households continued their economic cutback in February despite a certain pop megastar driving a huge increase in spending at music festivals and event venues.
Australians living in outer-city suburbs and rural areas are the biggest beneficiaries of the government's reworked stage 3 tax cuts, new analysis shows.
Despite headline data suggesting the cost of living crisis may finally be easing, few Australian households would have found covering their essentials has got any easier.
The world's most valuable automaker said its sales growth this year "may be notably lower" than last as it continued developing the "next-generation" vehicle, likely a lower-priced model.