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China's August data inconsistent and raises eyebrows; India exports fall; US data solid; UST 10yr 4.34%; gold and oil rises; NZ$1 = 59 USc; TWI-5 = 68.5

Economy / news
China's August data inconsistent and raises eyebrows; India exports fall; US data solid; UST 10yr 4.34%; gold and oil rises; NZ$1 = 59 USc; TWI-5 = 68.5

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand, with news China is showing signs of struggle, and yet the Wall Street-anticipated signs the US would slow in 2023 are yet to emerge.

But first, this coming week will be dominated by the US Federal Reserve's interest rate decision on Thursday (NZT). Also on Thursday, Fonterra will report its profit result and it is expected to be an unusually good one. Additionally in the United States, all eyes will be on the release of September PMI figures at the end of the week, as well as several housing indicators earlier including housing starts, building permits, and existing home sales. Central banks in England, Japan, China, Turkey, Norway, Sweden, Thailand, Switzerland, Brazil, Indonesia, the Philippines, and South Africa will all be reviewing monetary policies and rates. Eyes will be on updated inflation rates in the UK, Canada, and Japan. And there will be PMI data for France, Germany, the UK, the Euro Area, Japan, and Australia.

Over the weekend, China said the cost of new houses slipped -0.1% in August from July, the same slippage as in the month before. Given the known low sales levels, this seems a dubious outcome, especially as only 16 of the 70 largest cities reported prices holding or advancing very slightly. The rest fell. For pre-owned houses, prices inched up in only 3 of the 70 major cities in August from July. The reported slippages in the other 67 cities were remarkably similar, which also doesn't pass the smell test. This all has significant implications for international travel volumes, and visitor levels from China.

China also said that "the total retail sales of consumer goods was 3,793.3 billion yuan, a year-on-year increase of +4.6%. Among them, the retail sales of consumer goods other than automobiles were 3.382 billion yuan, an increase of +5.1%" which is actually quite good. But it is simple math to extract from that "retail sales of automobiles", and that showed virtually zero growth.

Meanwhile, Chinese electricity production retreated in August from July coming in -2.5% lower, which for a country as large as China is quite a drop. Year on year, electricity production rose only +1.1%, also not indicative of an expanding economy. But nevertheless, they reported industrial production rose +4.5% from a year ago. Either China is undergoing a recent spectacular burst of energy efficiency and reduced energy density, or one of those statistics is unreliable.

And also struggling was foreign direct investment. "The actual amount of foreign capital used was 847.17 billion yuan, a year-on-year decrease of -5.1%" on an 8 month-to-date basis, they reported. But given they reported the seven month total as ¥767 bln that means the August inflow was ¥80 bln or less than NZ$19 bln which is a decline in the pace we have seen recently and tiny for an economy as large as China.

Over the weekend, the Russian central bank raised its policy rate by +100 bps to 13% to both battle rising inflation and defend the ruble. They can't seem to get it up from the 1 USc value. Meanwhile, Russian inflation is rising again, currently at 5.2% and the central bank expects it to rise to 7% by the end of the year.

Indian exports rose in August from July on the usual seasonal basis, but were down -6.9% year-on-year due to elevated commodity prices and weakening foreign demand. Imports fell too, so their trade deficit rose.

In the US, industrial production rose +0.4% from a month earlier in August, above market expectations of a +0.1% increase and compared with a downwardly revised +0.7% rise in July. Year-on-year it is a small gain of +0.2%. One sector keeping these levels positive is their mining industry (which includes oil production).

However, the New York state factory survey turned quite positive in September. The headline general business conditions index rose twenty-one points to be a positive +1.9. New orders and shipments increased. Delivery times remained steady, and inventories continued to contract. And perhaps more importantly, looking ahead, firms continued to grow more optimistic about the six-month outlook.

But perhaps American factory data however won't be flash in September because of those strikes starting at their big three carmakers.

Also not quite so upbeat was the August University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey, however. It slipped from July, but is still at a higher level than at any time since late 2021, apart from the prior two months. Consumer views on current sentiment, current conditions and expectations of future conditions are all very much higher than a year ago.

Meanwhile, the US Fed balance sheet continues its wind-down even if the sell-off in the past week was relatively small.

The UST 10yr yield starts today up +1 bp at 4.34% and again near their August highs. A week ago this rate was 4.26% so up +8 bps from then. Their key 2-10 yield curve is unchanged at -70 bps. And their 1-5 curve is now at -97 bps and less inverted. Their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is much less inverted, now at -106 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 4.16% and unchanged from Saturday. The China 10 year bond rate is down -1 bp at 2.67%. And the NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now at 5.00% and unchanged. A week ago it was also at 5.00%.

The price of gold will start today at just on US$1924/oz and up +US$2 from Saturday. And this is only marginally firmer from the week ago level of US$1920/oz.

And oil prices are +50 USc higher from Saturday at just under US$90.50/bbl in the US and back to its ten month high. The international Brent price is now over US$93.50/bbl. But for the week these are rises of +US$3.50/bbl or +4%.

The Kiwi dollar starts today little-changed from this time yesterday at 59 USc, still settled in its tight range. A week ago it was at 58.9 USc so little-change from then also. Against the Aussie we are holding at 91.8 AUc. Against the euro we are still at 55.4 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 is actually little-changed at 68.5 and little-changed in a week too.

The bitcoin price has moved up a bit from this time Saturday, and is now at US$26,486, a small rise of 0.4%. A week ago, this price was US$25,820 so a +2.6% rise since then - in fact its first weekly gain since August. But volatility over the past 24 hours has been very low at just on +/-0.3%.

The easiest place to stay up with event risk today is by following our Economic Calendar here ».

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35 Comments

Higher rates and slowing economies.. recipe for disaster..

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8

Surprise!

Actually no surprise at all, been pretty clear that central banks have been gunning for destruction for a good year or more now.

You're like one of my kids when they started counting down Xmas from 3 months out. If Xmas consisted of a kick in the knackers.

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8

Bit of Milligan then? “I’m walking backwards to Christmas.”

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its called cause and effect. Raising interest rates slows economies.

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So does a reduction in energy-input:

https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/global-pmi-tracker/#xj4y7vzkg

Physics doesn't lie. 

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2

Unfortunately physics is not a sentient being, so is unable to lie or tell the truth.

All we have is theories in peoples heads.

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2

The laws of physics are provably true (by humans or anything else in the universe sufficiently intelligent to do so). The laws include thermodynamics which PDK is referencing above.

So the physics is truth and it cannot lie. People, however, can and do lie. They (including some posters on this esteemed site) also obfuscate, deny, omit and mislead.

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3

The US Army War College just published a new paper on key lessons from the Ukraine War which suggests that the US could expect up to 3,600 casualties per day in a high intensity war, and that an adequate force could only be sustained with conscription. https://press.armywarcollege.edu/cgi/viewconten   Link

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4

What can be the reasons for the Western delay in hypersonic armaments?

Today, engineering schools, in full agreement with companies, want people who are efficient in handling various IT tools: Catia, etc. If indeed the latter, at the time when they were conceived, brought great progress for those who were used to thinking, they only “Taylorized” the real trade by degrading it enormously, leading to the incremental improvement that tomorrow will be the prerogative of artificial intelligence. On the other hand, from my point of view, replacing the Soviet physicists and engineers of the time with AI would absolutely not be possible.

So that's where we are and until our scientists are able to make the equations speak, it seems highly unlikely that the West will be able to make hypersonic missiles worthy of the name. What do I mean by that? Not rockets that go to Mach 5 which is the limit between supersonic and hypersonic, but rockets that reach Mach 9 like the Zircon at sea level or 27 like the Avangard at high altitude while remaining maneuverable .

To reach such a level, it is imperative to reconnect with studies focusing on paper and pencil. Write the equations, try to solve them by hand and understand, when making approximations, what they correspond to physically and if they are legitimate.

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2

What is the writer arguing?

That computer simulations are inaccurate or just more time consuming?

That AI won't ever replace engineering judgment?

That we're not training enough engineers?

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I don' think the writer is capable of putting an argument together.  That article is meaningless waffle that jumps to a tangential conclusion that the education in the west has collapsed and we are about to be eclipsed by elsewhere.  Given the hypersonic missile mentioned in the heading (but missing from the article), the presumed implication is that the Russian education system has eclipsed the west.

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Hypersonic is this and hypersonic is that. The point about missiles is not how they deliver but what they deliver. In the Armageddon,  Apocolypse or whatever, just half a dozen nuke missile strikes will be all it takes. No nation’s defensive system would be capable of knocking down all the incoming.

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The World Is Struggling to Make Enough Diesel And it could get worse. Saudi Arabia and Russia have turned down the taps on production of crudes that are richer in diesel. All this comes on top of a global refining system that shuttered less-efficient plants when Covid-19 trashed demand. Now consumption is rebounding but many refineries are gone. - BBG  Link

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5

This is probably the most impactful news of today

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2

With China slowdown this must mean there is a considerable drop in supply....    "IF china demand rose or there was a unexpected conflict" things might get expensive quickly"   time to fill a 44gal drum me thinks

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I am a bit of confused now: 

"it is simple math to extract from that "retail sales of automobiles", and that showed virtually zero growth."  - Got me curious on this -  I worked out a 0.66% increase.

"Year-on-year it is a small gain of +0.2%." from US industrial production figure. 

Small gain is smaller than virtually zero? 

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Such an objective source.

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FED balance sheet continues it's wind down. Global interest rates are certainly going to stay aloft, in particular fixed interest rates and term deposits. A timely reminder that NZ's deteriorating debt situation is unlikely to go un-noticed and we can expect to be paying ever higher borrowing costs on debt rollovers going forward. 

Its not going to be pretty. 

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13

A2 milk has cancelled their exclusive contract with Synlait citing issues with delivery. Synlait already on the precipice with big debt and poor performance, A2 already own nearly 20% of Synlait. 

One last kick before picking them up with a full takeover? 

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SHOCK NEWS China reports true data.......

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Actually I find it interesting that Chinese data gets questioned but data out of the USA never does. We are brainwashed in the West to thinking we are always right, so not really all that different from the Chinese at the end of the day.

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6

I think plenty of stuff gets twisted in the West. It’s just perhaps not quite as extreme in it’s dishonesty. Probably just as bad, in a way. 
A bit like how the cronyism we have here is in some ways as bad as out and out corruption.

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The right call the twisted jobs data Bidenomics    data is always gd but gets revised to shitehouse 3 months later...... The thing about the US is their are plenty of independants who will report their own series and doing so does not mean a one way trip to the organ donation unit.

Single party politics (sarc) require a single positive narrative of how great the leader is and how great they are doing....   

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There is a whole host of independent actors in Industry, Finance and Academia analysing data, reaching their own conclusions, searching for holes in official data and freely publishing their results, or even producing their own alternative data series. 

How does that ecosystem look in China?

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This is what a trading desk does, it looks for holes to make money off.....

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Cheapest 91 now $2.95 per litre in Auckland. So effectively $3. And many stations around $3.15.

If oil prices keep nudging higher, and the NZD keeps weakening, this could get ugly.

Having said that, motorway traffic seems a bit lighter which is nice. Not sure how much of that, if at all, is down to fuel prices. Construction vehicle traffic seems lower, but that’s just an anecdotal observation.

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We are approaching school exams, so more seniors off and WFH. On a Friday i can leave Silverdale at 6:45am and be over the bridge 25mins later.   Its definitely a bit quieter,   At Hampton Downs I have been getting Diesel at $1.97 for ages, the local Gull is $2.43 now      29km down the road to Helensville and its about $2.02.

Once nats get in we will start seeing massive cutbacks, things will turn dire quickly but Nats will be able to blame Labour.   In many ways its best to get the pain over ASAP, but I can see many moving to Aussie in the next 24 months.  The worse it gets the sooner they can drop interest rates 1.25%

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BP just crossed $3 per litre for 91 down here in Chch (at least the BP I drove past this morning). Filled up the V8 4x4 last night at Caltex - only gets filled once every 3-4 months - and came to $310 as it needs at least 95 and a 100L tank. Cashier was flabbergasted that I filled it all the way. 

Wouldn't say roads are necessarily quieter here. Lots of retail stores look quiet though. 

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NZTA weekly traffic counts for Auckland do not look unusual.

https://www.stats.govt.nz/experimental/covid-19-data-portal        Under transport

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Thanks. The data doesn’t seem to back up my anecdotal observation!

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This paragraph confuses me ...

"Over the weekend, China said the cost of new houses slipped -0.1% in August from July, the same slippage as in the month before. Given the known low sales levels, this seems a dubious outcome, especially as only 16 of the 70 largest cities reported prices holding or advancing very slightly. The rest fell. For pre-owned houses, prices inched up in only 3 of the 70 major cities in August from July. The reported slippages in the other 67 cities were remarkably similar, which also doesn't pass the smell test. This all has significant implications for international travel volumes, and visitor levels from China."

Why can't the cost of a new house fall but the actual sale price of that same house go up, down or have no change?

And how are existing house sales linked to the cost of a new house? I accept that over the longer term there may be a tenuous link but over the short term?

Anyone help me out?

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The cost here is the cost to purchase, not the cost to build.

As per google translate of the data source "Changes in sales prices of commercial housing in 70 large and medium-sized cities in August 2023"

 

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"Meanwhile, Chinese electricity production retreated in August from July coming in -2.5% lower, which for a country as large as China is quite a drop. Year on year, electricity production rose only +1.1%, also not indicative of an expanding economy. But nevertheless, they reported industrial production rose +4.5% from a year ago. Either China is undergoing a recent spectacular burst of energy efficiency and reduced energy density, or one of those statistics is unreliable."

Hmm... Is electricity the only source of energy? No. Take for example the cheap oil and gas China is getting from Pootin.

Ergo - the conclusion "Either China is undergoing a recent spectacular burst of energy efficiency and reduced energy density, or one of those statistics is unreliable." looks a tad illogical and more so in light of the fact that some big electricity consumers often both buy and/or produce their own electricity dependent on the cost of inputs.

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Companies ease off on share buybacks as rising interest rates push up costs

Growing pressure to invest and regional banking turmoil also deterred companies from purchasing their own shares

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