Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand with news the world's economy is expanding in most places despite some 'hot' pressures.
The week ahead will crescendo on Wednesday with the RBNZ Monetary Policy Review and OCR decision. But there will be a lot else going on too. India and South Korea will also have rate decisions this week. In the US, they get their September CPI result along with PPI data. Japan will release sentiment survey updates, along with Australia. The EU will release retail sales data and factory order updates will come in Germany.
But first, we should note that today is the final day of the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival and normal work will restart tomorrow. And in Australia, most of their eastern states will be on holiday today (except Victoria). NSW and Victoria have also moved on to summer time, so are back to 2 hours behind us.
But the big news over the weekend was the eye-catching headline (s.a.) rise in US non-farm payrolls (NFP) of +254,000, almost double the expected +130,000 rise. And as regular readers will know, we also check the actual change, which was almost double that, at +460,000. All very impressive. There are now 162 mln people employed in their civilian labour force. There is momentum here and the impact of +460,000 more paid workers will be widespread and impact the whole global economy.
Both their unemployment rate, at 4.1%, and the number of unemployed people, at 6.8 million, changed little in September.
And the East Coast/Gulf port strike has been settled. So that is no longer an economic irritant.
This result is of outsized change and it had an impact on the financial markets. While the equity markets didn't react, the bond markets did, juicing up benchmark UST yields noticeably. The USD rose sharply too.
The US Fed may well be restrained by this labour market surge. Cutting rates into a fast-rising economy would be inflationary and they have only just gotten things back on an even keel. By any measure, they have achieved a 'soft landing'. They seem set up for a solid 2025 expansion (provided their economic management stays professional of course).
The latest Q3 estimate of US economic activity is +2.5% which would take their nominal GDP to US$29.4 tln and +US$1.4 tln more than a year ago. It is impressive. However, given today's labour market surge, there are upside 'risks' to these estimates.
And we should note that all this is going on while the US Federal Reserve shrinks its balance sheet. It is now down to just over US$7 tln, a -US$76 bln drop in one month, a -US$900 bln drop in a year, and an almost -US$2 tln drop since its 2022 peak. Monetary policy resilience is being built back up. Yes, US Federal debt held by the public is rising in dollar terms but not as a proportion of overall economic activity (GDP). But a stock-to-flow ratio like that is a bit of a junk sideline stat. You will hardly ever see that ratio in the commercial world.
China may still be on holiday. And by official accounts, travel-related activity is 'normal' but other aspects of their economy are still a worry. When they return tomorrow we will likely start to see the rollout of their signaled fiscal 'bazooka'.
Singapore delivered good retail results for August, to be up +0.6% from a year ago and almost all of that in the latest month.
And Vietnam surprised observers by releasing data that showed their economy grew +7.4% in Q3-2024, driven by exports, even though production was hit by Typhoon Yagi. That is up from 7.1% in Q2-2024 and expectations it would only expand by +5.5%. Along with India, they have wrestled the mantle from China of the fastest growing developing economies.
More broadly, world food prices in September rose much more than expected, and across the board. In fact, it was the largest month-on-month increase since March 2022. Rising dairy prices were among the gainers, but not so much meat prices.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 3.97% and down -2 bps from Saturday. But that is up +20 bps from this time last week. The key 2-10 yield curve is still positive, but lesser at +5 bps. Their 1-5 curve inversion is now inverted by -40 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is now at -89 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.06% and down -14 bps. The China 10 year bond rate is at 2.16% and unchanged. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now just on 4.29% and unchanged from Saturday, up +3 bps from this time last week.
The price of gold will start today at US$2653/oz and up +US$4 from Saturday.
Oil prices are down -US$1 at just under US$74.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is still just on US$78/bbl. A week ago these prices were US$7 lower at US$67.50 and US$71.50 respectively.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 61.6 USc and unchanged from Saturday. That is a big -2c fall from a week ago however. Against the Aussie we are still at 90.6 AUc. Against the euro we are down -10 bps to 56.1 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today still just under 69.7, and unchanged from Saturday, but down -100 bps from a week ago.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$62,760 and up +0.8% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at just under +/- 1%.
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26 Comments
Here comes hurricane Milton - tracks suggest bulls eye on Tampa and then Orlando....
Might be a tad harder to get insurance in Florida once this bad boy passes through.......without insurance....well you know the rest........
“It’s worth noting though, that the impact to the cat bond and ILS market from hurricane Ian was not significant, despite it being a $50 billion loss event.
…Finally, it’s also worth pointing out that with many cat bond and ILS funds already running with returns year-to-date of close to or in the double-digits, there is a good chance that many cat bond funds and other ILS funds focused on private reinsurance and retro can absorb a relatively meaningful hurricane loss event within their annual earnings.
The cat bond market fell by roughly 10% after hurricane Ian’s landfall in 2022, but already many cat bond funds have delivered a 10% or greater return in 2024, so the buffer against losses is clear.”
https://www.artemis.bm/news/milton-forecast-for-florida-hurricane-landf…
No Baywatch, it was CNN and Colorado State. They must be under the pay of big oil.
"Despite ideal conditions that fueled pre-season predictions of upwards of 20 named storms, the immediate prospects for one are low, and none have formed in the Atlantic since Ernesto in mid-August – a streak unmatched in 56 years. “If you had told me a month ago that nothing would (develop) after Ernesto I wouldn’t have believed you,” said Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane expert and research scientist at Colorado State University. “It’s really surprising.”"
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/09/06/weather/hurricane-season-atlantic-st…
Yes, there's going to be much more from the inquiry
"The New Zealand naval ship that hit a reef in Samoa over the weekend it thought to have lost power before it ran aground."
https://www.stuff.co.nz/politics/350441801/what-we-know-about-hmnzs-man…
The insurer wouldn't believe the valuation. Captain Cindy paid for a ferrari and got a corolla.
"Norwegian owner set for huge profit on multipurpose ship.
22 August 2018 11:30 GMT Updated 11 March 2020 13:49 GMT
By Gary Dixon
Norway's Ostensjo Rederi is selling an OSV to the New Zealand navy for a whopping NZD 103m ($69m).
The 2,800-dwt multifunctional support vessel (MSV) Edda Fonn (built 2003) will be delivered in May next year.
VesselsValue values the ship at only $19.73m.
The vessel will be outfitted with dive, ROV and hydrographic systems by Ostensjo early next year.
https://www.tradewindsnews.com/new-zealand-navy-pays-69m-for-ostensjo-o…
The population of USA increases by about the size of Auckland each year - just under 2 million, net. Someone has to be paid to govern, feed, cloth, protect, educate and house them. (NB: Stats aren't linear. They are high on occasions and low on others.)
But maybe your point is to question the better-than-expected stats on this occasion to flatter the efforts and re-election chances of the current administration?
The U.S. has been adding jobs at a healthy clip for a couple of years now, and gains in the public sector have been an important factor in that growth.
Over 200,000 jobs were added in June alone, for instance, according to the Commerce Department, and 70,000 of them were in federal, state and local governments.
Governments at all levels are hiring, boosting the job market (marketplace.org)
Where do all these jobs materialize from?
Many in the public sector. ZeroHedge highlighted the fact. But people think ZH is 'fake news'.
Politico also highlighted:
Government employers added some 43,000 jobs in May, according to Labor Department data released Friday — part of a 272,000-job uptick that surprised many analysts.
https://www.politico.com/newsletters/weekly-shift/2024/06/10/public-sec…
The Longshoremen getting ~8% per year raises over the next 6 years sounds like a lot until you realize that US Federal debt has risen 8.3% per year CAGR since 2007.
With US govt spending rising 8% CAGR, if you're getting 8% CAGR raises, it's an indicator that you're falling behind on a real basis.
The new deal, which sources close to the talks said came together quickly, provides a pay raise of 61%, or $4 per hour over each of the six years of the pact, and extends the master contract to Jan. 15, 2025, to allow the sides to negotiate outstanding issues. A final agreement would still have to be ratified by union members.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/port-strike-ends-ila-usmx-231303017.html
Increasingly it seems that the FMA is a more effective referee than the Commerce Commission
AA Insurance to pay $6.175 million penalty for misleading customers
https://www.fma.govt.nz/news/all-releases/media-releases/aa-insurance-t…
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