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US PMIs fall ahead of non-farm payrolls report taking bond & equity markets lower; global PMIs mixed; China housing still in crisis; Aussie trade surplus rises; UST 10yr 3.98%; gold up and oil lower; NZ$1 = 59.5 USc; TWI-5 = 68.7

Economy / news
US PMIs fall ahead of non-farm payrolls report taking bond & equity markets lower; global PMIs mixed; China housing still in crisis; Aussie trade surplus rises; UST 10yr 3.98%; gold up and oil lower; NZ$1 = 59.5 USc; TWI-5 = 68.7

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand with news the global bond market is rallying (prices up, yields down) with traders now pricing in three US Fed rate cuts before the end of the year. There is a sudden risk-off mood appearing today.

We should remind ourselves that the Northern Hemisphere is well into its summer vacation season. Markets are relatively thin, and this is when changes can get amplified. "Silly season" news is usual fare (food scares, catastrophes, etc.) although this year it is rather dominated by the Olympics.

First up today, we should note that American initial jobless claims came in slightly higher than expected, +249,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis. This 'rise' attracted the headlines. But on an actual basis they were in fact lower at 215,000 and a decrease of -10,000 from the prior week. There are now 1.94 mln people on these benefits.

Their July job cut tally was unusually low at just over 25,000. However the same report suggested new hiring activity was low too.

Tomorrow's July non-farm payrolls report is still expected to reveal a +175,000 expansion.

Also low was the widely-watched ISM factory PMI for July. The extent of the retreat was more than expected, the sharpest contraction since November 2023. Shrinking new order levels was a key cause. Falling new orders were also a feature of the internationally-benchmarked S&P/Markit PMI version although they do not see the American factory sector contracting. Both versions reported lower inflation pressures.

These reports have pushed Wall Street sharply lower today.

Globally, there were a number of factory PMIs released today. In Europe, the contraction was unchanged. In Japan, their marginal expansion slipped back into a marginal contraction in July. In India, their strong expansion continues but now features very frothy inflation.

South Korea they are holding a good expansion.

In Taiwan they are getting a good, sustained expansion. In China, it is back to [minor] contraction as new orders fall away.

And the fierceness of the housing falls in China was on full display again in July. The value of new homes sold by the top 100 developers fell -20% in July from a year ago. Sales fell -16% in June on the same basis. The declines in prior months were in the order of -30% to -40%.

In Europe, the English central bank cut its policy rate by -25 bps to 5%, as expected.

In Australia, some heat seems to be going out of some residential real estate markets. July prices actually fell in Melbourne, Hobart and Darwin, and were no-change in Canberra from June. That only leaves Perth Adelaide and Brisbane with rising prices. Sydney rose too but only a minor +0.3%.

And perhaps we should note that ANZ's purchase of Suncorp Bank, now finalised, has shifted ANZ ahead of NAB in market share of mortgages in Australia, no longer 'fourth'. It is a ray of 'good news' in the shadow of the bank's bond market manipulation scandal there.

Heat is also going out of the Australian factory sector with a spreading contraction in July. Output, new orders and employment are all retreating faster now.

However, the Aussie merchandise trade surplus rose in June to AU$5.5 bln. No surprises there. But interestingly there are stresses beneath the hood. They are seeing the falling global steel price hit some reasonably significant aspects of their terms of trade. Iron ores prices fell -9%, coal prices are down -13%. Gas prices are down -8%. Shipping more helped cushion the overall impact. And they were 'lucky' - the price of gold rose +12% offsetting some of the other falls.

Global container shipping freight rates eased an insignificant -1% last week, holding very high. The same causes are still in play. That is extending sailing time - and fattening shipping company profits. Bulk cargo rates fell -9% last week however.

The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 3.98% and down a sharp -12 bps from yesterday. The key 2-10 yield curve inversion is shallower at -21 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now at -82 bps. But their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is much deeper at -138 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at just on 4.08% and down -6 bps. The China 10 year bond rate is down -2 bps at 2.14%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now just on 4.30%, and down -6 bps from yesterday.

Wall Street in Thursday trade on the S&P500 is down as fast as it rose yesterday, down -1.8%. Overnight European markets were all lowe by between -1% and -2%. Yesterday Tokyo ended its Thursday trade down -2.5%. But Hong Kong only fell -0.2% as did Shanghai. Singapore fell -1.0% however. In contrast, the ASX200 rose +0.3% and the NZX50 was the star of the show (if anyone actually noticed), up +0.7% on the day.

The price of gold will start today up another +US$9 from yesterday at US$2435/oz.

Oil prices are -US$1.50 lower at just over US$76/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is just over US$79.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar starts today another +10 bps firmer at just on 59.5 USc. Against the Aussie we are +40 bps higher at 91.5 AUc. Against the euro we are up another +20 bps at 55.2 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 68.7 and up +20 bps from yesterday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$62,304 and down a very hard -6.4% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been high, at +/- 3.6%.

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14 Comments

OneRoof has already spent your tax refund

What will you spend your tax cut on? Changes could boost borrowing power by $80,000

https://www.oneroof.co.nz/news/what-will-you-spend-your-tax-cut-on-chan…

If 5,400 does not hold the S&P500 is in for trouble.

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8

Seems like Ed is their new ‘young blood’ in their spruiking team

pretty pathetic how low the Herald is stooping to spruik

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There's something sick about the whole system. "Look, there's more money we can strip from the economy through more consumer Debt, and of course any additional liquidity on offer"

"Property investors will be able to borrow slightly more as a result of the tax cuts. That’s because when they buy a rental property, they also get more rental income."

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‘Sick’ is the perfect description 

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It's pretty sad when they can't suggest how much interest it would save if applied to existing debt. 

To their own vested needs, Spruikers certainly lack the necessary empathy to provide impartial financial advice. 

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Its all about maximum sale price vs minimum purchase price so people have a little left over to actually live and enjoy life with.

This article together with the "we are sick of this market vendor hissy fit" one will be quoted in the future, like the same type of articles where during the Irish property correction.

 

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Interesting video about how modern jobs are unappealing, and productivity gains don't necessarily equate to better incomes. The neurosurgeon who quit's insights particularly enlightening 

https://youtu.be/4b6hetdvQbI?si=86_uOJo2hCj8ybsv

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Dovish Fed easily explained. #FOMC #ratecuts  Link

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You've got to laugh.

Rubio Introduces Bill to Counter Adversarial Financial Systems

China, Russia, and Iran use alternate financial systems to evade U.S. sanctions. Our nation must bolster its economic defense against this circumvention. 

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) introduced the Sanctions Evasion Prevention and Mitigation Act to ensure our adversaries face economic consequences for their anti-democratic actions, ranging from committing human rights abuses to promoting terrorism.

  • “Sanction enforcement is vital to enforcing our laws. When our adversaries evade U.S. sanctions, we must do everything in our power to ensure they are held accountable and safeguard our financial system. This bill prioritizes countering regimes that are attempting to circumvent U.S. sanctions, including those in Tehran, Beijing, and Moscow.” – Senator Rubio 
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This sounds very similar to Musk threatening to sue companies that didn't advertise on X (yes, yes, "formerly Twitter"). I wonder if they're buddies.

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The price of gold will start today up another +US$9 from yesterday at US$2435/oz.

When your 'savior' is just another patsy straight from Central Casting.

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Uncertainty in the Middle East perhaps driving gold  also some speculating Wall st is in for a reality check maybe  ? 

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"Bank of England cuts interest rates to 5% in first reduction since March 2020"

And what do we think will happen to interest rates if the below contagion spread?

"Junior doctors offered 22% pay rise by government to end strike action. Doctors have been on strike 11 times since December 2022, demanding a 35% pay rise."

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