Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand, with news the Americans seem to have a deal on their debt limit - at least until the extreme party members are overcome in a vote. They have enough funding authorised to last until June 5.
In the week ahead, we will get the US non-farm payrolls report on Saturday, and before that the JOLTS job openings numbers, the ISM Manufacturing PMI, and the Conference Board consumer confidence survey results. We will also get inflation rates for April for the EU, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and South Korea. In addition, Q2 GDP growth rates will be released for Canada, India, Brazil, and Turkey, along with factory PMIs for China, Italy, Spain, Canada, Russia, India, and South Korea.
Over this past weekend China's industrial profits data was released for April and it was weak. It fell almost -21% in the January-April period from the same time frame in 2022 although the drop was slower than a decline of slightly more than -21% for the first quarter. The marginal improvement in April alone will be of little real comfort because this is when a 'recovery surge' was hoped for on their opening up. But it isn't happening. Private firms are doing much worse than State-owned enterprises.
And Taiwan lowered its economic growth forecast for the year to +2.0%, the slowest pace in nearly eight years, after the island slipped into a recession in Q1-2023 reporting a -2.9% annualised drop in Q1 after a -0.8% retreat in Q4,-2022.
Singapore’s industrial production dropped more than forecast in April, down -6.9% year on year and -1.9% from March. This was the seventh consecutive month of year-on-year decline and the worst streak since 2015.
Japan's economy is standing out with its impressive resurgence.
Across the Pacific and as we have noted, there is a US debt deal, and even though it has yet to pass Congress, most think it will - after all, it always has in the past. But assuming it does, there will be a catch-up mode. The US Treasury now has very low cash reserves due to the consequences of the impasse and this will need to be made up. They will do that by rushing to raise funds in the Treasury Bill market, maybe as much as US$1 tln. And that will suck up liquidity temporarily until it is spent, all at the same time the US Fed has been selling down its own bond holdings. With the Treasury and the Fed both competing with banks for cash, lenders may see their own short-term funding rates rise, forcing them to boost the borrowing costs they impose on businesses and households.
In August 2022 when Treasury Secretary Yellen first raised the importance of getting this sorted, the UST 10yr yield was 3.0%. Today it is 3.8%. That is a broad reflection of the cost of obstruction in the Congress - for nothing material except the political points scoring. It is an increase in the risk premium because Congress can't do its job on time, and it is a cost that affects us all. (Yes, the Fed Funds rate rose much more over that period but that has very little influence on the UST 10yr rate. The Fed's benchmark rate changes affect short term rates.)
In the real world, American personal spending jumped +0.8% in April from March, the most in three months, and double the market forecasts of a +0.4% gain. It is a clear sign consumer spending remains solid. And it is supported by higher wages which have consistently risen more than spending (just not in April), and a tight labour market.
If there is a downside, PCE inflation is hovering around the +5% pa mark and not retreating much yet.
Durable goods orders rose by +1.1% in April from a month earlier following an upwardly revised +3.3% growth in March and easily beating market expectations of a -1.0% retreat. But year-on-year there was virtually no gain. Capital goods orders were even stronger for their recent rises, but again, little year-on-year.
Rising economic activity however is making the US trade balance higher in nominal terms as it raises the demand for all goods including imported goods. Over the past year to April the US has run a merchandise trade deficit of -US$1.1 tln. However that is -7% lower than in the same year in 2022. And the deficit as a proportion of GDP has fallen from -4.8% to -4.2%. Of course their overall trade deficit is much less when services are also taken into account.
The IMF has been reviewing the US economy and said American interest rates will likely need to remain higher for longer to tame inflation, and that Washington needs to tighten fiscal policy to bring down its federal debt. But overall it has been impressed with the way the US economy has been managed over the past few years.
In Turkey, they have had a final round of voting this weekend and although only half of the votes have been counted, President Erdogan has claimed victory. But financial markets have also been voting with their money, driving the Turkish lira to 20 to the USD, an all-time record low. Erdogan had to come out and deny there were cash withdrawal problems at banks as people got skittish.
Australian retail sales didn't change in April from March and were +4.2% higher than year-ago levels. That means in volume terms they will be lower because Australian inflation is running at 6.3%. (Their April CPI will be released on Wednesday.)
And in Canberra, MPs from the new Labor Government tackled RBA Governor Lowe in a private meeting over what they see as his 'demonising' of wage increases. But Lowe held his ground, warning them that generous wage rises they were backing would make inflation worse unless they were accompanied by increases in productivity. And if that is what turns out - wage rises without productivity increases - he said rates would rise in response. It was probably an unhappy and tense meeting, and probably seals the end of his time as RBA governor when his term expires in September. Being right is no defense in politics.
In the background, an Australian Fair Work Commission decision on the 2023 Minimum Wage/Awards application is due soon.
The IEA says global investment in clean energy is on course to rise to US$1.7 tln in 2023, with solar generation set to eclipse oil production for the first time.
The UST 10yr yield will start today at 3.80% and probably hold given it is a holiday in the US. A week ago this benchmark was at 3.69%. Their key 2-10 yield curve is less inverted at -79 bps after news of the apparent debt-limit deal. Their 1-5 curve is at -133 bps and little-changed. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is less inverted at -179 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 3.72% and little-changed. The China 10 year bond rate is unchanged at 2.73%. And the NZ Government 10 year bond rate is at 4.45% and down a mere -1 bp from Saturday and where it was a week ago.
The price of gold will start today at US$1946/oz and up +US$3 from Friday. A week ago the price of gold was US$1976/oz so a -1.5% fall from then.
And oil prices are +50 USc firmer from Saturday to be just under US$73/bbl in the US. The international Brent price is still just under US$77/bbl. For the week that is +US$1 firmer.
The Kiwi dollar starts the week at 60.5 USc. That devalues it -3.8% in a week, and -4.8% in a year. Against the Aussie we are still 92.8 AUc. Against the euro we are at 56.4 euro cents. That means the TWI-5 fell -20 bps to 69.4. So overall the NZD has devalued -2.7% for the week, and the same since the start of 2023.
The bitcoin price is a little higher today, now at US$27,359 and up +2.2% from Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has stayed modest at just on +/- 1.3%.
The easiest place to stay up with event risk today is by following our Economic Calendar here ».
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60 Comments
Meanwhile, in California, the insurance retreat gathers pace - interestingly even commercial insurance is being pulled in this case. So either the state, or the Federal government have to step in (that's an awful big liability to be taking on) - otherwise that's an awful lot of stranded assets.......
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/27/state-farm-home-insuran…
Don't think this is just a Californian issue - coming to a climate change susceptible home/business near you soon enough...........
If there was only a way to manage forests/greens to stop catastrophic wildfires.
"There is a future where fire restores our forests instead of destroying them.
It took 100 years to destroy the health of Sierra forests, but with the right resources, we can restore our forests in mere decades.
Thanks to Smokey Bear, a century of fire exclusion and the forced removal of Indigenous forest stewards, California’s Sierra forests are dangerously overgrown. Now, trees are packed together at up to five times their natural density, and fires that should regenerate our forests explode into infernos that destroy them."
https://www.nature.org/en-us/about-us/where-we-work/united-states/calif…
Didn't realise most new houses in California were being built in forests.
Agreed. Low lying beachfront about to be uninsurable.
That doesn't mean we stop building in low-lying coastal areas.
Early construction works already underway for a combined plan of more than 350 homes, a boutique hotel, a brewery and a rest home in Shelly Bay
Work starts on $500 million Shelly Bay development by Wellington seaside | Stuff.co.nz
Indeed. Very sheltered location. Still runs the risk of insurance being denied. Not a big deal unless you need a mortgage.
Not sheltered from the slop of the water in the harbour during an big EQ though.
This is better described as a tactical move by one company, that is having difficulty pricing a changed level risk in one location and category, and better able to deploy their staff resources and underwriting capacity into identifying profitable underwrite of risk in other categories and other locations. That should be business as usual for insurance companies, but they have devolved to a simple retail model and generic pricing.
We need to see this better targeting and pricing of risk, so homeowners bear the cost, rather than expecting other insurers, taxpayers and ratepayersto stump up for risky location choices.
My guess is that in our socialist paradise, people will resist this, kicking and screaming, so other people pay.
Mate just pulled out of a commercial property purchase in NZ because even after doing remedial work to meet the NBS standards no insurer would cover the asset.
Scary.
Japan's economy is standing out with its impressive resurgence.
Lost count of the number of times over the last year when people said 'looks like Japan are finally going to have to abandon their unconventional approach to monetary policy'. Amazing that people don't consider that they might have actually got it right.
The IEA says global investment in clean energy is on course to rise to US$1.7 tln in 2023, with solar generation set to eclipse oil production for the first time.
The last bit of that sentence sounds misleading, as if solar generation is about to overtake oil production, when it is the new investment in it that will be doing that.
Pages 60 to 69 of that report tell the real story
Meanwhile China has implemented a forest to farm policy.
https://globalvoices.org/2023/05/16/china-is-tackling-its-food-crisis-b…
The wonders of centralised planning by idiots.
Somewhere along the line his brain got adled
The first of many?
The Bank of England has lost control of inflation – and we all face a terrible price. Interest rates may have to hit 7pc to make up for mistakes by Threadneedle Street....Homeowners and businesses will pay the price (Telegraph)
Do you know the print media are selling clicks. How do you think that affects their headlines
If the Euro$ is the real issue turning "inflation" into disinflation then deflation, we should probably pay closer attention to what's going on there than what the FOMC is doing. What we find is an escalating series of tremors going back to last year. https://buff.ly/3q6EXl0 Link
31 trillion is a lot of moolah
Its 93 usd for every man woman and child.
Missing some numbers, by my maths... $9,393 per person.
Yep 31,000,000,000,000 / 330,000,000
Now im getting 93000 per person
First calc used 31B / 330M, my bad thanks for putting me straight 👍
Am I correct in saying this is total debt, not net debt. It looks like jfoe has answered below. 20T net
HW2, this will help you stay on track - https://www.usdebtclock.org/
🤣😳😔
Wow, I don't know if I should laugh or cry! So the National debt increases by USD 100,000 even 4 seconds! Way more than USD1 Million/minute
There's also a tab at the top "World Clocks" - very interesting when comparing countries.
Now if you really want to blow your mind, scroll down to unfunded liabilities section at the bottom. This is money they have promised but have no source of funds for it.
They are over $200T in debt.
The is literally no alternative other than to print their currency and devalue it. Fiat debasement is 100% guaranteed.
Opt out of the fiat system and buy Bitcoin, a scarce, digital asset that is available to everyone and can not be printed by anyone. Rules without rulers.
Wake up people, all currencies will loose purchasing power against real world goods and services.
Opt out of the fiat system and buy Bitcoin, a scarce, digital asset that is available to everyone and can not be printed by anyone. Rules without rulers.
If you're a DCA'er, it would have been good to add to your sack on the weekend. the BTC price is flying on the weekend's debt ceiling news. I don't like ascribing reasons but the news is just confirmation that more fiat is going to expand. Not rocket science.
Are all other crypto currencies you track doing well also
Ol' ratty moves like this and most of the large caps move HW. But given we're not in a confirmed bull market, the moves on altcoins are not as strong as BTC impulse 'generally speaking.'
The whole Crypto sector is cyclical.
Bitcoin moves impulsively, once it stabalises a bit, the money flows into large cap, mid cap then small cap altcoins.
Then they take profits back into Bitcoin and it usually has another move.
So in bear markets alt coins get rekt hard. Like 95% down sorta thing, but that also means that if you are happy to watch it go down for a while after buying, you are likely to do well with a 4-5 year time horizon.
I too like to gamble a bit, but with nothing serious #DogeFTW
There was a good dip on the weekend, and it has mostly recovered now, so well is relative haha.
Bitcoin is my long term savings accounts. All other Cryptos are like very high risk technology companies.
Allocate accordingly :)
.
The US debt is literally dollars / treasuries held by US households and firms as their assets - although a third of the total is held overseas. If US decided to reduce their debt to zero, they would make their own citizens / businesses about $20 trillion worse off, and they would destroy international markets of course.
And a tax liability to the 99%.
A tax rate set by the Fed!
Over the past year to April the US has run a merchandise trade deficit of -US$1.1 tln. However that is -7% lower than in the same year in 2022.
Also note Trade Deficit in Goods Jumps 17 Percent as Imports Surge and Exports Plunge
The latter report sent the GDPNow forecast down from 2.9 percent to 1.9 percent for the second quarter of 2023. Link
"The Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, Andrii Yermak, has said that inviting Ukraine to join the NATO alliance “can be a key factor in ending this war” in Ukraine."
Sounds good. "An attack on one is an attack on all".
But I'm sure the wise heads at NATO have thought through the reverse "An attack by one will mean an attack on all"
Let's hope we don't find out.
They've missed that boat I'd suggest. I believe NATO and Europe had the opportunity to head off this war in the first week, or even before, but now that has gone. Any NATO membership offer would likely exclude the current conflict so long as it is only Russian antagonists. Possible that it may stop someone else coming in with Russia though.
The best that can happen now is that the west ensures Ukraine has the weapons to defend itself. But I think they should allow Ukraine to attack bases in Russia from where attacks are launched. Constraining the use of those weapons to use inside Ukraine's borders only prolongs the conflict, and mortality count.
Ah yes. The Good Guys doing good again, and we know they always will.
The Mỹ Lai massacre was a war crime committed by the United States...involving the mass murder of unarmed South Vietnamese civilians by the United States Army during the Vietnam War. Between 347 and 504 unarmed people were killed by U.S. Army soldiers. Victims included men, women, children, and infants. Some of the women were gang-raped and their bodies mutilated, and some soldiers mutilated and raped children who were as young as 12. ...only Lieutenant William Calley Jr., was convicted. Found guilty of murdering 22 villagers, he was originally given a life sentence, but served three-and-a-half years under house arrest
Yes, when Vlad released his dogs Feb 22 a repeat was guaranteed. Even if a lot of those dogs turned out to be toothless jailbait and suffering AIDS etc.
All well and good to bring up My Lai, but don't forget the many villages wiped out by the communists because they refused to support the Viet Cong or NVA. My Lai was one village, where some out of control, battle fatigued US troops ran amok. The Communists had a systemic program that did effectively the same to many villages.
Murray. Yes, the NVA committed many frightful massacres. Hue an horrific example; estimates range from 3000+ murders, some as high as 15,000 civilians brutally executed. The actions of the psychopath Calley at Mai Lai deserve profound condemnation but that dreadful incident should be considered in context with the widespread violent horror being visited upon SV citizens by the NVA, especially by its southern guerrilla VC force.
Calley wasn't a psychopath. He was a young officer who was following his orders and lost control of his troops (and a perspective of right and wrong), and a scapegoat for higher command who directed the operation.
‘The best that can happen now is that the west ensures Ukraine has the weapons to defend itself’
How long should the west do this while they run big budget deficits and erode their domestic living standards?
(in principle I agree with you, but sense that at some point political will to support Ukraine may diminish when people see what it is costing them)
I agree with your bracketed comments IO. I struggle to believe they can't see the consequences of their choices. European/NATO leadership are not showing a lot of competence.
There is the other factor that almost no -one considers; the longer this goes on, and the more crimes that are committed by the Russians, the harder and longer it will take to rehabilitate them when the war is over, assuming Ukraine (the west) wins by having Russia give up. If Russia succeeds the the consequence are really too frightening to seriously contemplate.
Attacking Russia would risk giving them the rational to escalate to full mobilization and massively expand the frontline while Ukraine won't have much manpower left to mobilize already being all in.
Hungary and Turkey could veto Ukraine joining NATO. I'm sure it would suit NATO and the EU right now and use Hungary and Turkey as the whipping boy. Turkey gave the OK to Finland but not to Sweden yet.
Nationals announcement is going to piss a lot of people holding 800-1000 sq m sites in AKL.... old house all land value and if Nats get in you will have to apply for resource con to get your 3 houses.... and the NIMBYs will hold you for 24 months in court at least... this announcement alone will smash the value down of old houses on big sections in good locations.
And National will give 25k per con above a 5 year average.... and help with infrastructure costs, we are going out not UP Auckland. I can see all that land around Milldale becoming houses after all..... Council is not going to want to upgrade storm water in Manurewa vs greenfield if central will contribute towards greenfield costs. AKL Council is basically at debt ceiling now anyway....
Even smaller sites too. Eg. If you have a 400-500 square metre site, under MDRS you would be able to build 3 x three storey townhouses as of right.
You can already do that in the MHU zone but critically not the MHS zone. The biggest impact of MDRS in Auckland would be the massive rezoning from MHS to MHU.
Lots of developers are relying on, and waiting for, this change as the change from 2 to 3 storeys creates much better development feasibility by allowing for increased yield. Many will now be at a total loss. In fact I have already spoken to a couple of developers who have completely shelved plans now till after the election, and if National win and the MDRS is shelved their project won’t stack up in the foreseeable future. They are really pissed off.
As I said yesterday, this announcement will solidify and even worsen the housing construction slump over the next two years.
There is plenty of sections up near me HM, around Millwater edges and Milldale, the problems are
A) Investors cannot get a return on them, they are a complete money sink.... v low yields.
B) FHBers cannot afford them at current prices and interest rates.
C) People worry about builders failing during their build.
D) FHBers are eyeing homes further in that would be stretch affordable if prices drop another 20%
All of that watching and waiting is what pushes prices up again.
Once more on the merry-go-round.
-1.
That's not even close to true, lol.
US gets a debt-limit deal, but pressure on interest rates will rise in the short term
But according to Stuff, Adrian Orr promised that interest rates have peaked...
Yep, peaked......"The Kiwi dollar starts the week at 60.5 USc. That devalues it -3.8% in a week, and -4.8% in a year."
But has he? Can you provide any quote of Orr saying the OCR has peaked? Or that it won't go any higher? If you can, and then, I'll agree that Orr was very reckless in his statement!
Orr did not say that, reporters & commentators got ahead of themselves misinterpreting the last paragraph.
https://www.rbnz.govt.nz/en/hub/publications/monetary-policy-statement/…
Then, why are we not calling out MSM for misrepresentating of a very important statement ?
In August 2022 when Treasury Secretary Yellen first raised the importance of getting this sorted, the UST 10yr yield was 3.0%. Today it is 3.8%. That is a broad reflection of the cost of obstruction in the Congress - for nothing material except the political points scoring.
Don't think the term "Nothing Material" applies if the Agreement holds down Federal Spending to a maximum increase of 1% in 2024 when Inflation is running at least 4 times higher,, and even a increase of 80 basis points i the 10 year doesn't seem excessive. After all in September 2022 this happened: The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted to increase the fed funds rate by 75 basis points at its meeting on Sept. 20-21, 2022.
The IMF has been reviewing the US economy and said American interest rates will likely need to remain higher for longer to tame inflation, and that Washington needs to tighten fiscal policy to bring down its federal debt.
Think that is what those obstreperous Republicans just did.
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