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US Fed minutes show unease at inflation-fighting progress; Japanese machinery orders strong; China excavator sales weak; UK CPI slips; UST 10yr 4.43%; gold and oil slips again; NZ$1 = 61 USc; TWI-5 = 70.3

Economy / news
US Fed minutes show unease at inflation-fighting progress; Japanese machinery orders strong; China excavator sales weak; UK CPI slips; UST 10yr 4.43%; gold and oil slips again; NZ$1 = 61 USc; TWI-5 = 70.3

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news the American central bank is wondering if they have done enough yet to quash the inflation impulse.

But first, US mortgage applications rose +1.9% last week from the previous week, adding to the 0.5% increase from that earlier week and taking it to an unusual third consecutive week of gains in mortgage demand and only the second time this year that has happened. But they remain -11% lower than last year's weak level. Benchmark home loan rates slipped slightly (-6 bps) to just on 7%.

But the recent rise in existing home sales fell back in April, down -1.9% from a year ago and also down -1.9% from March. It would have been a larger fall, but a surge of homes selling at the high end of the market capped the weakness. These are transactions less likely to need a mortgage. And that recent trend is also raising the median price.

Yesterday's RBNZ scepticism that they are seeing needed 'last mile' progress in the inflation battle has been echoed by the US Fed in the minutes released earlier today for their May meeting. Getting to their target will take longer than they thought, these notes show. Some officials are open to another rate rise if needed to get on top of the stickiness. But in the end they stuck with their faith that disinflation will get them there. The equity market slipped when this document was released.

Prior to that release, the US Treasury had another very successful bond auction, for a 20 year maturity, and that delivered a median yield of 4.58%, down from 4.77% at the prior equivalent event.

Japan's machinery orders rose +2.9% in March from February, slowing from the +7.7% m/m gain in February but way better than market expectations which assumed a March correction was likely of -2.2%. Year-on-year March was up +11%. Their forecasts suggest the high levels of orders will be maintained in the coming three months. Of note is that orders for very large constructions (not included above) are running very strongly at present.

But in China, their excavator sales - a market canary - fell almost -10% in the first four months of 2024, with domestic sales down -3% and export sales down -17%.

In the UK, their CPI inflation rate eased to 2.3% in April, its lowest level since July 2021. However that was higher than the 2.1% rate expected. But that progress was overshadowed by the announcement that that country would go into an election on July 4, 2024. That is much earlier than expected. The UK pound rose on the news. There is currently expected to be a change of government at that election.

Some Australian survey data shows that most 45 year old Aussies plan to retire soon after they reach 65. That is unchanged since 2018/19. There are now 4.2 mln retirees in Australia. Given their workforce is 14.3 mln, that means there are currently 3.4 workers per retiree. The same ratio in New Zealand is 3.3.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.43% and up +1 bp from this time yesterday. The key 2-10 yield curve inversion is more at -44 bps. Their 1-5 curve is unchanged at -71 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is slightly less at -94 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 4.33% and down +4 bps. The China 10 year bond rate is unchanged at 2.32%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now at 4.74% and up +5 bps from yesterday.

Wall Street is ending its Wednesday trade with the S&P500 down -0.5%. European markets were also all down about -0.5% overnight. Yesterday Tokyo ended its Wednesday session down -0.9%. Hong Kong eased another 0.1% and Shanghai was little-changed. Singapore was down another -0.2% on the day. The ASX200 fell a minor -0.1% yesterday but the NZX50 was up +0.5%.

We have previously noted that American corporate earnings rose in the latest reporting season. But it turns out that is not the global situation. Sharply lower earnings in China's companies has spread to companies in other countries like Japan who are more China-dependent. A survey of almost 25,000 listed companies worldwide shows that earnings decreased -6% overall - led by China's -10% fall. The US outperformance was driven by their tech companies.

The price of gold will start today down -US$33 at US$2387/oz.

Oil prices are down another -US$1 at US$77.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is down a bit more to US$81.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar starts today up only a net +10 bps from yesterday at just on 61 USc. Against the Aussie we are much firmer, up more than +½c at 92 AUc. Against the euro we are firmish at 56.3 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 70.3, and up +20 bps from yesterday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$69,853 and up a mere +0.2% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just on +/- 1.0%.

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63 Comments

Zero carbon emission concrete/cement: 

https://bbc.com/news/articles/cxee01m5yero

 

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2

recycling!

Recycling is ALWAYS more expensive.

Which is why it doesnt pay.

(lots of coulds in that article...

How do you scale up the cement source from demolishing buildings? Answer; Demolish more buildings!

 

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7

Funny that concrete suppliers are very keen that it gets given back to them though ... Are you sure you're up to date on this?

https://atlasconcrete.co.nz/recycling/

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0

GIVEN back to them

ie they wouldnt pay for it or to go get it

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0

Is it cheaper/easier for the builder or whoever has waste concrete to give it back to the company that wants it, or to pay to dump it?

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1

there are currently 3.4 workers per retiree. The same ratio in New Zealand is 3.3.

It's a slippery slope down to 2. Recommend making alternative retirement plans if you're under ~45. Super surely will not be the same deal for future generations. Once in an era privilege.

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10

Start saving for your retirement while:

  • paying for everyone else's retirement
  • buying an overpriced house
  • fixing the broken infrastructure
  • building houses for massive immigration
  • dealing with global warming

Should be fine as long as they cut back on the smashed avo.

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51

Exactly.

Suggestion is simply to prepare yourself for the idea that that magic money pot is used up by the time you get there.

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7

If people think things are hard now.

They ain't seen nothing yet.

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11

agree

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2

Better to think in terms of goods and services. There might still be a flow of money but it will buy fewer goods and services. When you start thinking in terms of the physical outputs it's easier to see what needs to be done - dramatically improve labour productivity, by committing more of our current economic efforts to building productive capital, technology and infrastructure for the future. The best way to free up resource for that is to reduce the economic effort going into providing consumption luxuries for rentiers. 

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3

Move to Aussie- fixed it 

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6

Some come back so it cant be that Great

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0

Some even come back voluntarily.

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23

You could accompany one back on your shopping trip

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1

Yes, it seems everybody else must tighten their belt in order to preserve such a generous old person's benefit scheme.  Wouldn't dare ask the 50k retirees still working and earning over $100k to potentially live within their means and go without a handout.  

"B-b-b-but they pay tax".  So do many of the FHB who no longer have access to a $60m per year pool to assist with their home purchase.  A sort of  assistance that in the past resembled the capitalization of the family benefit, state advances corporation 3% loans, or just sane house prices to income that meant acquiring a meaningful deposit wasn't a decade long journey.  

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9

Sure, Super costs as almost as much as Education (no doubt it will overtake it soon), and not much less than the entire health budget (which I suspect largely gets spent on superannuants, too). 

Nevertheless, we have a responsibility to continue to pay spending money to retired millionaires, or working professionals who have ticked past a certain birthday. 

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4

Don't forget the Super Gold Card entitlements as well...cant have  them pay bus fares (under 5's of course)!

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7

Bus fares is one thing, but off peak travel on the Waiheke Ferry?  

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6
  • Paying off your tertiary education
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3

National Superannuation can't last. It will break

And the best time to start that muscular KiwiSaver replacement was twenty years ago.  The next best time is now.

Yes.  It hurts.  But New Zealand has no fairy godmother waiting to help.

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8

The same factors that would break National Super would also break the equity market and consequently Kiwisaver.

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15

So Frank.  What is your plan?  Something that takes care of all of us.

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0

Why assume I have a plan from an obvious observation?

If I have any plan at all it is to anticipate the end of growth.

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4

"Once in an era privilege"

Yes!

Along with burning the easy resources, plentiful untouched resources, the tailwind of financialisation and population explosions!

The golden era of the Oil age. Plenty to go round so there was relative peace.

Should I add the  lack of maintenance of essential infrastructure...

Yip.

The boomers had one hell of a party. Most just dont know it.

 

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15

"They paid their taxes"

(That's an /s if anyone didn't pick it up.)

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2

Ah yes - they did.

In effect it dampened the Party just a little.

Like a compulsary water every 2 hours... then back to the tequila

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2

pretty sure the millenials, gen x, y and z would have done the same thing

the few that tried to change the world back in the 60's got run over by the bus - or the weed(s) got them

Anyway relax - the worlds a warming so we will be alright in our destitute little pacific island paradise 

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2

$50 billion industry and thousands of jobs on ice due to Shane Jones obsession with mining...

(another broken  election promise but who here is surprised?)

https://newsroom.co.nz/2024/05/22/national-accused-of-breaking-offshore…

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8

"The answer, my friend , is blowing in the wind".

What happens if all 3 ministers have to recuse themselves on a decision??

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3

The donors sign it off themselves. I's surprised they haven't suggested this already as a way to cut down on red tape. 

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11

I'd prefer consents to the highest bidder. 

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4

It still a $50 billion boondoggle - and the cleanup costs will lie with the taxpayer

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6

You forgot to mention that they will affect the whales as well...hate them apprantly?

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2

If this is the case, the government needs to firm up the mining tax/royalty regime, so at least some of the economic benefits from letting foreign companies extract resources in NZ stays with the local communities.

Currently, the central government rakes in all the revenue from permitting, royalties, tax on salaries, etc. Mining companies prefer to fly in workers from overseas instead of training locals. The local councils are left with the bill to fund the infrastructure required to accommodate the extra workers coming into the area.

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4

...and we're left to pay for the clean-up and remediation once they disappear.....

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6

Takes two seconds to put that (cement, first comment) in perspective. 

How much wind and solar? Mined/supplied/built/installed/maintained by? 

Apples with apples is always good. 

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0

Hydro

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2

Yep.

Proper Hydro not pumped storage trash.

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3

Some Australian survey data shows that most 45 year old Aussies plan to retire soon after they reach 65.

Raising jobseeker is not ‘fiscally sustainable’? Sorry, but that is flat out wrong

Never fall for the line that lifting people out of poverty and reducing inequality is a task too complex or costly to undertake - Poverty is a policy choice

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4

Good article Audaxes. Evidence and facts. Much better than some of the pro-russia propaganda you sometimes post. 

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3

NZ the same?

Here we are unlikely to stop giving money to retiree's that dont need it until Winston is gone

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0

Nvidia - instant 10% jump after markets following their earnings beat.

I may have packed my bags a little.  Tomorrow will be good!

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1

Growing supplies to China

Putin and Xi Jinping discussed many economic issues.

"This concerns the expansion of our supplies of farm produce to China," Maslov pointed out. "Apparently, practically all issues related to the supply of beef and topinambour have been settled and all sanitary restrictions have been adjusted and removed. This is very important for Russia, because Russia is gradually becoming the main supplier of agricultural products to the Chinese market".

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2

Assumedly, and given the sizeable increase of production of late, Russia has overcome previous problems with its food safety, salmonella, e-coli, ASF etc, and flaws in their control and reporting of ingredients in processed meat,  sufficiently to satisfy Chinese import criteria. NZ exporters will readily attest not only to the rigour of the relative regulations but also that they might change without warning.

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4

I wonder how many know what topinambour is? And why it is mentioned with beef ... ;-)

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0

Anyone for plov?

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0

From our good friends in public health.

"Today, @COVIDSelectreleased a staff-level memo exposing allegations of wrongdoing and illegal activity by Dr. Fauci's Senior Advisor, Dr. David Morens. New emails included in the memo incriminate Dr. Morens in: Undermining the operations of the U.S. government. Unlawfully deleting federal COVID-19 records. Using a personal email to avoid the Freedom of Information Act.

"I can either send stuff to Tony on his private gmail, or hand it to him..."

"I suggested Arthur try to interview Tony directly and connected him to our 'secret' back channel."

"I learned from our FOIA lady here how to make emails disappear"

https://x.com/COVIDSelect/status/1793328001582506479

 

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8

Careful Profile, no one wants to know they were scammed AND mugged. It doesnt help that many ran towards it gleefully. I see people above blaming the ' boomers' for the state of the economy now. Well how about you all look at yourselves. You all sat at home obediently doing nothing and living off made up money. Now you moan. 

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15

Not quite "blaming the boomers".

The Boomers just played the game that was in front of them.

Which was the good life, here and now. Its what most apes have done throughout history.

 

What non-boomers DO NOT want to hear is how hard it was in your day ....

That just highlights the ignorance of those that dont know where we are now at ...

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9

I worked straight through all the lockdowns, am I allowed to blame boomers? 

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2

Biggest US retailers cut prices as inflation hits shoppers

Analysts see Target and Walmart setting a new tone for sector after years of increases

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0

For Powerdownkiwi:

https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/05/we-get-more-useful-energy-out-o…

Apologies, you may need a new theory of everything.

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3

Its great but PDK's view remains fundamentally correct - perpetual consumption of an ever growing pile of the earth's resources is not possible

want to help slow the curve - icehouse ventures back some of the new "inventors"

https://www.icehouseventures.co.nz/

Mint was a TV3 news highlight recently focusing on their new tech recycling of computer components

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4

complete nonsense obviously eg

"So, wind power is already ahead of fossil fuels when it comes to giving us more useful energy back than is needed to produce, install, and maintain wind turbines. "

You lost me at useful. Electricity is only one component of the energy puzzle. Im also pretty sure we are no longer using sail boats for freighting goods.

https://ourfiniteworld.com/2024/05/21/reaching-the-end-of-offshored-ind…

see point 9.

The thing that most people do not realize is that industrial use and transportation use are extremely large sectors of the economy, and these sectors are very low consumers of electricity ... In recent years, electrical consumption as a percentage of total energy consumption for the industrial sector has averaged about 13% of the total

 

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1

You lost me at useful. Electricity is only one component of the energy puzzle. Im also pretty sure we are no longer using sail boats for freighting goods.

Sorry:

https://www.businessinsider.com/sc/a-new-sail-design-is-pushing-the-mar…

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1

Ignoring the could ... its a wind add-on to base Fossil infrastructure/use.

Which is exactly the same as wind turbines.

It cant work the other way round and still power an industralised economy.

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1

Try looking up Mike Casey and the electric orchard.  Industry does not use much electricity now.  But that's only tradition.

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0

Industry uses fossil fuel because of a Profit motive.

Its far superior / reliable / flexible / suits infrastructure etc.

Nothing to do with tradition

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1

Will they, went solar on their factory roof gets down to a few cents per kw/h ? 

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1

No.

Thats only some electricity.

When the sun shines.

 

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1

A reminder to people that understand (believe) the global economy is the US economy. Take care.

We have previously noted that American corporate earnings rose in the latest reporting season. But it turns out that is not the global situation. Sharply lower earnings in China's companies has spread to companies in other countries like Japan who are more China-dependent. A survey of almost 25,000 listed companies worldwide shows that earnings decreased -6% overall - led by China's -10% fall. The US outperformance was driven by their tech companies.

Up
0