US, Euro-zone and Chinese economy in concerted slowdown; Rush for safe havens; Spanish situation critical; Central bank intervention eyed; RBA may cut 50 bps
Here's my summary of the key news over the long weekend in 90 seconds at 9 am, including news the global economy is now headed for a concerted slowdown after data emerged over the weekend showing much weaker-than-expected American jobs creation , a slide in China's factory expansion and signs of a worsening crisis at the heart of the Euro-zone.
US stocks fell more than 2.5% on Friday night after just 69,000 jobs were created in May, less than almost all forecasts. See more here at BusinessInsider US stocks fell a further 0.4% in late trade before a late rally saw them close broadly flat. The early fall followed data showing US factory orders fell unexpectedly in April for a second month, Bloomberg reported. US stocks have now fallen 10% from their peaks in April.
Chinese stocks fell 2.7% overnight after more data was published showing its economy is slowing too. Economists are worried China may not be able to restimulate its economy in the same way it did after the Lehman crisis of 2008, given uncertainty over a political leadership transition, high inflation and falling house prices. See more here at Bloomberg.
Meanwhile, the Euro-zone continued to lurch from crisis to crisis. Spain's Prime Minister called for a Europe-wide banking union to ensure stabilty of the banking system. Spain's banking system needs at least 50 billion euros of fresh capital to make up for massive losses from loans to its imploded property sector. The Spanish government is thought unable to bail out its own banks and Germany is pushing for Spain's government to accept a bailout similar to that imposed on Portugal, Greece and Ireland. See more here at Bloomberg.
However, Spain is reluctant to embrace German-style austerity, which many now see as a discredited strategy to reduce debt and restart economies.
The impasse over the Euro-zone appeared to deepen over the weekend as German Chancellor Angela Merkel refused to accept calls for a common Euro-zone government bond, which would effectively mean Germany guarantees the government debts of Southern Europe's heavily indebted economies. See more here at Bloomberg.
Renowned hedge fund investor George Soros also said over the weekend there was just 3 months left to save the euro. See more here at the Telegraph.
Also in Europe, Cyprus is expected to ask shortly for a bailout for its banking system, which has built itself up over the years to be worth 9 times Cypriot GDP. It is now dubbed the 'Iceland' of Southern Europe. See more here at Yahoo.
Fear about the global economic slowdown and the potential break-up of the Eurozone has seen many investors rush to safe haven investments such as government bonds. The US 10 year bond yield fell below 1.5% for the first time on Friday night and New Zealand bond yields also fell sharply. The German 2 year bond yield went negative, meaning investors are effectively paying the German government to look after their money.
Increasingly, markets are expected some form of concerted central bank intervention to calm down markets. Investors are looking for signs the US Federal Reserve will engage in a third round of Quantitative Easing or money printing to buy US government bonds, and that the European Central Bank will also buy more Southern European bonds. See more here at Bloomberg.
Closer to home, the Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to cut its official rate by at least 25 basis points and possibly 50 basis points from its current 3.75% as its economy slows in line with China's. See more here at Sydney Morning Herald.
What does it mean for us?
A concerted slowdown in the global economy and the inability of China to restart its strong economic growth would bear down on both economic growth and inflation in New Zealand. That would mean lower interest rates for longer and slower economic growth for longer, along with higher unemployment, particularly if the Australian economy slows further and is unable to soak up surplus labour from New Zealand.
Financial markets are pricing in a chance the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will cut its Official Cash Rate by around 44 basis points over the next year, although bank economists still forecast the next move in rates will be higher around the March quarter.
Any move lower in the Official Cash Rate would make floating mortgage rates more attractive than fixed rates, although it would also indicate a slower economy, the potential for higher unemployment and a risk that house prices may flatten or fall.
The New Zealand dollar tends to drop in line with expectations for commodity prices when the global economy slows. It also falls when appetites for risk globally dry up and investors rush back to safe havens in America and Japan. However, there is a chance that heavy money printing in America and Japan could weaken those currencies vs the New Zealand dollar.
The New Zealand dollar was steady around 75.7 USc, having dipped under 75 USc late on Friday night before hopes for central bank intervention held up appetites for riskier assets.
No chart with that title exists.
53 Comments
Sounds like a good day to have an auction of dairy commodities.
Seriously though, does anyone know why the spread of volume against delivery dates has been changed so much?
http://nzx.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b8a03199b83b7d3f31d0f2086&…
Start here Colin , you should find what your looking for....http://www.dairyco.org.uk/datum/dairy-processing-trade/wholesale-prices/fonterra-auction.aspx
Also handy ......http://www.nzxfutures.com/system/dairy_reports/reports/295/original/The%20Dairy%20Trader%202012%2005%2011.pdf?1336682528
I think the USMP figures are due also.
Thanks Christov.
Your second link illustrates just how great the change in volume versus delivery dates has been when compared to the link I put up. I am still wondering why. Perhaps a sign of panic?
Your first link didn't tell me anything that is not already provided by globalDairyTrade, and is out of date in its explanation of contract delivery dates (referring to only 4 contracts).
Hi Colin...look um...flick this guy an Email with your question....and I'd say he'd have a fair suspicion..
I, um...think i'll leave it with you.
It looks like Fonterra product, and The Dairy Trader states it is Fonterra's offerings, so I think it is all Fonterra product. Just with a delivery volume pattern that I have not seen before on globalDairyTrade.
Contract2 in tonight's auction is no longer the highest volume contract for WMP, AMF, Cheddar or casein. Compare that to the auction before where Contract2 volumes dominate all others.
http://www.nzxfutures.com/system/dairy_reports/reports/295/original/The…
There you go Bernard June 6th..I said you be having a couple of unusually busy days.... and bingo.!...
Hope the lads took heed with the Aussie stocks....
The RBA will cut...to follow.
The NZD will begin the rough ride downward despite any minor recoveries.
On you article The Unbalanced Non Growth , this is point I have been making , the emphasis has been on the perception of good Governance rather than the actual hands on rebalancing. To say that the management of the confidence in the economy has been the real priorty would be an understatement.
Now there will only be exposure.....followed by excuses for not forseeing the cold front moving in.
It's not going to take long for the Australian economy to percieve all those Kiwi job snatchers as a burden they could well do without.
I mean truthfully is it their pending unemployment problem or ours...?
Global slump alert as world money contracts Growth of the world money supply has dropped to the lowest level since the financial crisis of 2008-2009, heralding a severe economic slowdown later this year unless authorites rapidly take action.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financialcrisis/9311190/Global-slump…
Otsuka Duojinshi
"Clear signs of trouble are emerging in the US, until now the last bastion of strength."
Here are a few more signs - California is collapsing under the weight of Grecian public employee profligacy; Illinois, New York, and others states accompany the golden state as well. Wisconsin shall vote tomorrow and provide a glimpse of the micro solution at hand - ending welfare state / public employee union tyranny.
QE II in the US has run it course and it has not primed a single pump - merely prolonged public employee union and crony favored incompetence. The US dollar is strengthening (and oil prices are falling) not because of any inherent economic strength - but for one simple reason - the dollar is the last refuge for scoundrels everywhere.
So many economic and social organizational fantasies of the libtard lunatics are coming undone - all at once. It is a perfect storm of Thatcher's observation about running out of other people's money. State control via environmental insanities are falling apart. State pension inanities and medical promises have reached impossible mathematical reality. Multicultural and solipsistic impositions of social dynamics will likely begin the terrifying process of blame placing. Inappropriate victims will become targets as our politician attempt to divide (and conquer) us
"There is mounting anger in North America and Asia over the failure of the Europeans to use their vast resources to contain the brushfire in Spain."
What "vast resources" would those be? The game is up and the "brushfire" in Spain is but tiny exemplar of a worldwide conflagration in finance as the too big to fail begin to realize that they won't be able to pull off their scam. US election season paralyzes action. The €U? - complete paralysis. China? Japan? Saudi Arabia? Other "leaders" of the set that have positive trade balances? All of these countries are in the turn away in horror stage and tending to their own knitting.
The anger mounting in electorates everywhere should be something the politicians might pay heed. But that is not is the case.
Nero fiddled, Rome burned. Fires to come.
Oddly enough , no commentators have latched onto the " springtime effect " on US jobs numbers ....... the same sudden slow down in jobs growth occurred in 2010 and in 2011 too .
The year on year jobs creation in the US throws up an interesting set of numbers :
2009 - 5.6 million
2010 - 0. 9 million
2011 + 0.5 million
2012 + 2.5 million
....... if you're a trend follower , those figgers tell a story of gradual economic recovery .
Women be praised , the gals gained 138 % of all the jobs created in May . This suggests that male employment in the US workforce dropped .
Despite the negative data GBH there will be an upward swing to the USD...China will be sweating on QE3..... The big game is on.
For a couple of years now I've suggested a return to protectionism as a distinct possibility, on a number of levels I'll now upgrade that to probability.
As for John Boy, he won't be needing to call the chickens in for a feed....they know the way now.
Percieved safety Steven.....nowhere is safe in the truer sense of the word.
There are facts that back up the trend rather than the FX bulls**t that gets trotted out.
Risk off the menu will be their latest recycled byline.......
Would you leave your money in a (largely ) commodity based currency during a sharp period of decline....?
When the next Lehman moment hits, probably Spain, the NZD and the NZX will get dumped in the blink of a super computer, Aussie too. Next big QE's will likely be seen as panic and signs of how bad things are prompting further sell offs rather than being stimulatory
..... actually , I think that things are going rather well .... the recovery is a tadge patchy , and there's a smattering of panics either occurring or predicted ...... and that's business as usual methinks ....
I guess , after being punched around by the GFC and it's after effects , one becomes a little blaise .....
..... another collapse you say Bernard , Cyprus this time ? ... OK , bring it on ....... survived them all so far ....
Sofa ? ...... best place to spend the winter , infront of the log fire , and with an improving book ....... life is good my friends , very very good !
Uh, relative safety maybe....in the near term....NZ is seen as risky, well look at our private debt....like duh...Yes I agree that no where is safe....the EU is a mega mess, USA looks wrecked as well...japan is comatose......china looks to implode/explode very fast..........the q is, is this the musical chairs time end game......and even if you have a seat will the legs hold (bonds? etc)....or maybe the one you are looking at is a mirage (gold?)....all very uh interesting....
yikes....as someone says....
regards
No more gold for me Stevo.....like I told those guys looking for the Holy Grail...No thanks I already got one.
So no I'm not pushing that barrow...!
As the hare said to the tortoise....You can't rollerskate in a buffalo herd.....but you can be happy if youv'e a mind to.
lies, damn lies and statistics, the unemployment rate went up slightly...more ppl joined teh queues to get work than found work.
U.S. Nonfarm payroll employment changed little in May (+69,000), and the unemployment rate went up to 8.2 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on June 1st. Employment increased in health care, transportation and warehousing, and wholesale trade but declined in construction. Employment was little changed in most other major industries.
http://www.tradingeconomics.com/united-states/unemployment-rate
Looks like the male employment has indeed dropped.....
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/30/japan-as-role-model/
One thing on the numbers, if they are part time and / or poorly paid then the numbers are less "impressive".
as possibly indicated here,
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/page/2/
and then since we are a global economy consider un-employment rates in the EU,
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/20/kings-of-denial/
So a recovery is uh....dubious....to say the least.
regards
...... no , it's the " Iceland of Southern Europe " , according to Bernard ........
Isn't it amazing how pissant little jurisdictions such as Iceland , Ireland & Greece can have the whole financial world quaking in its boots ..... praise be to the power of financial leverage !
morning Gummo
your message isn't quite clear there...
did you mean to say
"isn't it amazing that a pissant little industry such as finance, which really should just be a utility, attracts intelligent people who could have otherwise actually contributed something to the world. Buying and seliing things without adding value is just dumb, and simply clipping the ticket is a combination of myopic, greedy, and lazy"
is that what you were trying to say?
I'm sure GBH will provide his own answer. I'm sure that was written with your tongue firmly planted in your cheek
However, to spring to GBH's defence. He seems to use a "less is more" approach and that paragraph is more in line with Iain Parker's "More isn't enough, Much More is required".
(with apologies to GBH. And special apologies to Iain, who, when he restrains himself, does a fine job of proving to me that sometimes (especially with respect to Iain's posts), "Less is More". In fact, haven't seen any posts from Iain in some time.... Iain....Where are you? I miss your skewering of various people who pop up to have a shot at you... can you have a shot at this?
.. I think you meant to say , " they have been allowed to do waaaaaaaaaaaay more harm than good " .......
If I recall , the governments of Britain in the 1980's , and the USA a decade alter , unleashed their banks from prudent regulations ...... in a mad scramble to pinch market share from one another , to dominate as " financial hubs . "
..... whatever happened to Jolly Kid's bright idea for NZ to become a financial hub .... did the wheel fall off ?
..... whatever happened to Jolly Kid's bright idea for NZ to become a financial hub .... did the wheel fall off ?
No GBH...the air made it's own way out of the tyre.....the hub had a cap , it bamboozled John Boy as to it's removal... to get to the nuts n bolts of the thing.
But hey doesn't every FX trader percieve their industry as a worthy enterprise.....why produce anything when you can sit around watching pips n clicks in your longs or shorts...(weather dependent)
At least .. now..he will be evaluated on more than just his confidence.....and patter.
Financial Hubub indeed......phatooey!
Nobody talks about – silence – frightening !
…what about Japan, one of the biggest driver of the world economy ? Arnie Gunderson http://www.fairewinds.org/fukushima and other nuclear experts are painting a grim picture not only about Japan’s economic future.
I’m also concerned imported food and other material from the Asian region isn’t tested properly here.
Deflation in Japan.., Walter, is turning to implosion causing super eavy anti-matter the sheer weight of the YEN may well become their ...Black Hole.!
On the imported food......Buy N.Z. produce...it's clean ....it's green....just like our rivers ...our kiwi fruit...etc.
You know when your dad used to say .."If it don't kill ya it'll only make you stronger."...?
He lied.
Its just too frightening to get ones head around Kunst. When I was 16 I picked the Three Mile Island Melt as an assignment subject. It kinda coloured my life I think. My best friends father came here from Britain to build a nuclear power plant but the whole thing never eventuated so he went into a different field. He lent me several books to explain the industry and the problems. He scoffed at my 'qualms'. He is such a nice man, I still see him every now and then, but I thought at the time humans really have no hope when people like him are willing to put all of humanity at risk when there are other options available. I remember him telling me with a bit of a smirk as you would a teenager, there was no way they could ever have an accident or a meltdown, they were just soooo safe. And as for the waste.... not a problem.... although he could never explain what they were going to do with it.
I wandered around the supermarket the other day with my grandchild. Should I buy her raisins from California, hmmm maybe not. What about some tuna and cracker snacks.... hmmm nah. But as you say the silence is frightening. MSM not allowed to touch the subject methinks. Too big too ugly.
Bernard / Gareth,
This link may be worthy of display
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/01/paul-krugman-newsnight-uk-aust…
I understand why keynesianism is counterintuitive but it is correct in these circumstances, and krugman is does a fine job of explaining. yes, I am a keynesian.
Both camps are wildly off the mark when in a resource strapped world they continue to talk about growth.
Krugman is sort of right on one point though. When all money is debt, as it is, then one person saving or paying down debt creates a larger problem for someone else. It is all nonsence though as the interest on that debt has to come from future production, but it can't because there won't be.
I just don't understand how you can solve a debt problem by increasing the debt with more borrowing. Denial of the problem i.e. too much debt is not going to solve it. Krugman's argument is that the amount of stimulus is never big enough but guess what it will never be big enough. A debtor whether an individual, company or Gov't has to face up to the problem eventually and accept the consequences of their reckless behaviour.
Ditto a creditor. If the creditor has lent recklessly and a debtor borrowed recklessly often the only solution is liquidation or bankruptcy where both lose. The point gets reached where there's no point in throwing any more good money after bad with a creditor extending terms on a debt hoping things will come right and a debtor continuing to make payments on a rapidly declining asset
No not genius :) In the old days debts used to die with monarchs. Michael Hudson points out banks love democracies because debts tend to be perpetual and be passed from govt to govt, especially these days under threat of exclusion from "markets". Would be interesting if a govt in NZ ran up a huge debt or assumed private sector debt as per Ireland whether the next generation via a populist party could claim it was "odious" and refuse to pay it or insist asset sales were not legitimately agreed to and nationalise them again
Andy
Its not debt per se, its the interest on the debt that is the killer, I think what Krugman is not pointing out is that this will only work as it trends to zero interest/zero increase in borrowing, but he is correct in the pointing out that those two venal individuals opposite him are pursuing ideology and twisting the facts to suit...essentially they don't care if people suffer as long as its not them
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