Here's our summary of key economic events over night that affect New Zealand, with news global trade is facing a tough challenge in containerised freight costs.
But first, initial new US jobless claims actually fell modestly last week to +195,000 (although the seasonally adjusted level rose). There are now 1.67 mln people on these jobless benefits. All this is a tiny 1.1% of their workforce and unchanged in a year.
But all eyes are now on tomorrow's non-farm payrolls report when a rise of +185,000 is expected, and a continuation of the high levels of employment.
The reported level for job cuts was very similar to the very low April level, so no special signs of stress there.
A strong labour market would drive demand, including for imports and that is what we are seeing. May US imports were higher than in March, although the gain was modest. And there was a modest gain in exports as well. Although the US deficit in both goods and services is running higher than 2023 levels it is far lower than 2022 levels. For calendar 2024 it will come in just over 3% of their total economic activity, a decrease from 2023.
US banks are starting to raise deposit rates for savers to retain and grow their funding. But, as Bloomberg is pointing out, they are also back raising funds by collateralising their mortgage books. Readers with memories of the GFC might be surprised to know how much collateralised mortgage obligations (CMOs) have risen. These are on top of other mortgage-backed securities. One to watch.
Separately, it is starting to look like the US bird flu outbreak in parts of the US will be more serious for their dairy industry that initially hoped. It is likely that milk production declines will have an international echo.
Despite lingering price pressures, the ECB lowered its three key interest rates by -25 bps overnight as earlier signaled and expected, marking a shift from nine months of stable rates. Inflation has retreated by more than 2.5 percentage points since September 2023. The main refinancing operations rate was lowered to 4.25%, the deposit facility rate to 3.75%, and the marginal lending rate to 4.5%. Because it was well signaled there has been little market reaction. However they gave no clue about where their policy rates are headed from here.
This came as German factory orders did not bounce back in April from the March dip, as was expected. There has been no interruption to the now long-established downtrend there.
EU Parliament elections are currently underway. Results won't be known until early next week, but nationalist and far-right candidates are expected to make gains.
Many countries released trade data overnight and this included Australia late yesterday. Their exports dipped in April, but their import demand unwound rather heavily especially for consumer-related products. From that, their trade surplus rose.
China's April trade data will be released later today and rising levels of exports (+6%?) are expected. It is a surge that many other countries worry about because of it is driven by "excess capacity" and "dumping" arising from lower domestic demand.
And staying in China, their housing industry is probably not going to drive any economic activity there for a long time. China has moved to bar housing construction in some areas in its latest attempt to shrink a mountain of unsold homes that is weighing on prices. The new restrictions stop local authorities from selling land usage rights to developers in cities with unsold housing inventories that would take three years or more to clear -- a criterion that more than 40% of major cities meet. And that in turn is going to hurt local authority revenues hard.
Container freight rates rose another +12% last week from the week before in an increasing jump in the cost of global trade. These freight costs are now +180% higher than year-ago levels. The same culprits are at work - security, canals, and capacity. Outbound from China is the main pressure point. Inbound to China costs are falling and are just one seventh of the outbound rates. Bulk cargo rates are little-changed however, and still very low, near where they were first 30 years ago.
The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.28% and down another -1 bp from yesterday. The key 2-10 yield curve inversion is unchanged at -44 bps. Their 1-5 curve is also little-changed at -71 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is still at -107 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is still at 4.26% and unchanged from yesterday. The China 10 year bond rate is also unchanged at 2.32%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now at 4.70% and down -4 bps from this time yesterday.
Wall Street is unchanged in Thursday trade on the S&P500. European markets are all up +0.4% in overnight trade. Tokyo ended its Thursday trade up +0.6%. Hong Kong was up +0.5% But Shanghai was down -0.5%. Singapore was unchanged. The ASX200 ended its Thursday trade up +0.7% but the NZX50 ended down -0.2%.
The price of gold will start today up another +US$19 from yesterday at US$2379/oz.
Oil prices are up +$1.50 at just on US$75.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just under US$79/bbl and a smaller rise.
The Kiwi dollar starts today marginally firmer from yesterday at just over 62 USc. Against the Aussie we are still at 93 AUc. Against the euro we are marginally firmer at 57 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 71.2, unchanged from yesterday and still its highest since late February.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$71,007 and down -0.9% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has also been modest however at just on +/- 0.7%.
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48 Comments
Actually the media themselves are forefront & of course they have the airwaves at their disposal to moan on. Seemingly normal redundancy & business closures don't apply to the relative employees. That’s for the plebs not them. Good journalists are in short supply. If you are one of the few, you’ll find work easily enough.
For instance. Top headline NZ Herald today. Air NZ Makes Shock Announcement. What a great shock it is not, that the airline is to assume daily flights to Bali. Most important though is the reporter gets some clicks on the record, and feeds profile. Altogether, rather pathetic.
Well lets be honest here the tax cuts were a joke. The bands are not even increasing at the rate they should be in the first place to stay inline with wage increases, let alone getting a cut. I'm getting an extra $2.15 a week, thankfully I have no mortgage. Basically the government is stealing your pay rises and has been doing so for like a decade under Labour.
Far longer than the last Labour government Zwifter. More likely the last four or so governments. It's just that the cries of indignation are getting loud enough they can't be ignored.
Doesn't change the fact that this government, just like the others doesn't really have a clue or vision of how to fix it.
as if people with cancer are the only suffering a medical crisis? And the so-called tax breaks for landlords (actually reinstatement of basic cost/interest deductibility) continues to be a beat up - landlords of new builds, rental housing monoliths like Ockham and social housing landlords (lets not talk about how much $$ their management extract first) get those "tax breaks" but I do not see you whining about that.
Agreed. Honestly starting to wonder if the average Kiwi couldn't wipe their own behind without government assistance.
Sure, the budget was crap (as are all budgets it seems) but I'm definitely tired of the endless "where's my free stuff" whinging.
(Cancer drug promise aside, as that is at the very least brain damaged politics from National)
Aren't the news organisations just reporting on what people will read and be interested in - clicks - whether from people agreeing or disagreeing with the story or point of view. It seems that the "we want more money from the budget" stories have really hit a nerve with you guys, so they are likely working just as intended.
#ECB's Lagarde: Let there be no doubt on ECB determination on 2% inflation target. Link
OUCH! German 10y yields jump by 5bps as ECB cut backfires w/higher ECB inflation projections for 2024 and 2025 at the same time. Bringing 10y German yields closer to US yields. US-German 10y yield spread drops to 174bps, lowest since Feb 2024. Link
But all eyes are now on tomorrow's non-farm payrolls report when a rise of +185,000 is expected, and a continuation of the high levels of employment.
The QCEW suggests the labor market might be closer to what the HH Survey has been saying this entire time. And QCEW is by far the most comprehensive data on US jobs there is. Significant implications for 2024 including tomorrow's payroll figures for May. Link
Despite lingering price pressures, the ECB lowered its three key interest rates by -25 bps overnight as earlier signaled and expected, marking a shift from nine months of stable rates.
That's a very bold move, could go either way but if other Reserve Banks hold they might end up looking like idiots.
Not bold at all. Nor will they look like idiots if other central banks move much more slowly.
Methinks too many here have their thinking about central bank rates swayed by the foolishness of our central bank. (History will not be kind to the RBNZ's performance over the last 4-5 years,)
"...it also effectively reneges on a commitment Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made to the government of New Zealand in 2022."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-06-07/giles-issues-new-ministerial-dir…
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