Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand with news all eyes are on some well-signaled and massive fiscal stimulus due for release in China.
When it is announced, it will overshadow everything else. But this week will also feature a wide range of other economic data released. Top of the list will be September's PMI data from China, the US and the EU among others, Japan will chime in with its industrial production and retail sales data, The EU will also be releasing inflation data, as will South Korea. And the US will also have more labour market updates, and end the week with its key non-farm payrolls report. In Australia, it will be about building consents and retail trade.
Locally, it will all be about the September housing market reports, plus the Wednesday full dairy auction. But don't forget the following week, when the RBNZ will be releasing its OCR decision, so that will dominate this week's background outlook.
We ended last week with some eye-catching optimism sweeping over Chinese stock markets after unprecedented money-printing fiscal stimulus signaling there.
That came as their central bank some significant monetary policy changes. On Friday they cut the seven-day reverse repurchase rate by 20 bps to 1.5%. They also cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 50 bps, the second reduction this year, bringing the weighted average RRR for financial institutions to around 6.6% after the cut.
They clearly need it. Construction firms are failing at a much faster rate now.
The Hong Kong and Shanghai equity markets may be roaring, in anticipation of the coming stimulus. But Chinese industrial profits are weak. For the eight months to August, they are a touch less than for the same period last year. For August alone they were -23% lower than the same month in 2023.
In Japan, they are about to get a new prime minister, a self-acknowledged policy wonk, and someone who has been on the outer of the main political establishment for years. He will now be at the center. Shigeru Ishiba is set to make the economy his top priority, signaling plans to lighten the burden of rising prices. Markets are expected to react when they open later today.
In Taiwan, consumer sentiment rose in September to its highest level since March 2020.
In the US PCE inflation rose at an annualised rate of +2.2% in August, a confirmation that inflation's impulse is back under control. That is its tamest rise since February 2021.
American disposable personal income was up +3.1% in August from the same month a year ago, personal consumption expenditure was up +2.9% on the same basis.
The final September reading of the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey was released over the weekend and it was revised up from the flash result. The main reason for the increase was higher confidence in the 'present conditions' part of the survey. This survey is now at a five month high.
US wholesale inventories slipped in August from July, but were up less than +1% from a year ago. It was similar for their merchandise trade deficit; down in August from July but up from a year ago. We have made the point before, but the size of these deficits is minor compared to their overall economic activity.
Nothing in these second-tier data releases alters the expanding track of the giant American economy.
EU sentiment is broadly stable in September. Firmer consumer sentiment offsets a slight weakening in business sentiment in the month.
In Australia, they issued an unusual warning late last week: electricity supply from solar rooftops was destabilising their distribution networks because of oversupply. The immediate problem is in Victoria but may affect South Australia as well. The households in those regions will likely be paid nothing for supply.
Separately, we should perhaps keep an eye on the butter price, At auction it has been basically stable for most of the year.at about US$6500/tonne. But the EU butter price has risen to US$7,200/tonne since July. Either the GDT price will shift up strongly, or the EU price will fall sharply. It might be the latter because we saw it fall -5% in the last few days of last week.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 3.75% and down -1 bp from Saturday. The key 2-10 yield curve is still +19 bps positive. Their 1-5 curve inversion is still inverted by -44 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is still at -104 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 3.96% and down -1 bp. The China 10 year bond rate is at 2.18% and up an unusual +8 bps in a curious move and back to where it was at the end of August. Perhaps it had something to do with this? The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now just on 4.26% and unchanged from Saturday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2658/oz and up +US$15 from Saturday and back up nearer it all-time high.
Oil prices are +50 USc firmer at just over US$68/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just on US$72/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 63.4 USc and down -10 bps from this time Saturday, up more than +1c from this time last week. Against the Aussie we are little-changed at 91.9 AUc. Against the euro we have slipped -10 bps to 56.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just under 70.6, and down -15 bps from Saturday.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$65,683 and down -0.3% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been very low at just on +/- 0.4%.
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33 Comments
Thats a fairly old term.
Maybe not as old as terminally finding fault with where you live, or life in general.
But if you just have the telescope aimed 2 feet in front of you, you might miss what's going on with the system in general terms.
Nowhere is really safe, one needs to determine whether what's going on is a temporary blip, or a new norm you need to adjust your approach to, and understanding of.
Stay tuned tomorrow, for another parochial news story with disappointed people crossing their arms.
I half renovated a grotty place I rented once. I knew it was a sh*tbox when I took it on, but I took it on because it was super cheap and I didn't have a problem putting in some energy making it nicer.
Apparently the wiser move was to complain to the authorities and get free rent.
This is the problem with renting furnished places. How many owner occupiers strip their dishwasher back to parts in order to clean it? Let alone landlords.
The bed wasnt broken either, just that the slats had moved out of place. All that was required was that they be picked up and put back on the top rails before placing the mattress. Are these tenants idiots or something?
I rented over there for a while, I don't remember it being any better.
Although I think landlords here are particularly cheap, there are some obvious safety issues I have seen in rentals that are just ignored, so its good to see they are actually being held to account these days.
The passive voice "they are being held to account" hides that only tenants who know their rights will personally hold landlords to account. AFAIK there's no regulator actively inspecting rentals to ensure they comply, so most landlords will get away with providing sub-standard accommodation and charging an arm and a mortgage on your first-born's leg for the privilege.
"American disposable personal income was up +3.1% in August from the same month a year ago"
Interesting stat. Do we track this in NZ? How is it measured? (Just re-read the link - effectively net take home pay. Income less personal taxes)
Ultimately this is about the economy 'working' or not.
That's the difference between disposable income and discretionary income/spending.
Disposable = everything that makes it to your bank account after compulsory at source deductions.
Discretionary = the stuff you have a choice about after other necessities have been paid for.
I think they are referring to the national accounts measure, NZ equivalent is:
disposable income: total income of New Zealand residents, from all sources, that is available for final consumption or saving, after net payment of current transfers to the rest of the world
This is basically: increase in private debt + govt deficit spend - current account deficit.
So, US disposable income has basically gone up because the Govt is spending a lot more than it is taxing.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/in-depth/529387/most-benefit-of-government-s…
Philip Morris First's Costello introduces the concept of alternative advice to parliament.
Price in VIC is currently negative $61/MWh. Perhaps that's where winstone are relocating their mills to?
https://aemo.com.au/en/energy-systems/electricity/national-electricity-…
It will be interesting to see how much of the $216 million she has set aside to cover lost revenue from heated tobacco products goes to consumers and how much will go to Phillip Morris.
The Treasury ultimately assumed Philip Morris would pass on the excise cut to consumers but said this was not clear given it had a monopoly in the market."It may be that the reduction in excise taxes is not passed through to consumers in price reductions, but rather is retained by the sole importer," Treasury warned.
Uk Labour cares ‘more about greed and power than making a difference”
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3vkdy997rko?fbclid=IwY2xjawFmpMFleHR…
Climate Change denialists are increasingly getting a nasty wake-up call. Despite being sucked into "alternative facts" science, Insurers don't give a shit what they believe, climate change means house insurance is on an ever-increasing upward trend.
The US is a good market to look at t what's coming. Established insurance market with lots of locations that are now being hit by increasingly frequent weather events due to climate change, wild-fires, flooding, storm surges, sea level rises, hurricanes, droughts.Anyone buying or who has an interest in property in New Zealand should look into what's happening. Florida and Lake Charles good places to start.
Managed retreat is going to be first-in first-served while the money lasts, and it's not going to last very long.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/markets-with-madison/reinsurers-alm…
As I foreshadowed a few weeks ago, some big jumps in development contributions proposed in Auckland, especially in a few locations where the jumps are massive:
https://akhaveyoursay.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/development-contributions…
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