Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand with news China is still stuck in its rut, the US twisted by tariff talk, Japan sees progress, and Russia's currency gets a big downgrade.
But first, this coming week will end with the US non-farm payrolls report, and analysts expect a sharp recovery to +183,000 added jobs, far higher than the unusual (pre-election) October report of just +12,000. Before that they will deliver their JOLTs report, and there will be factory order data, more PMIs, and more sentiment surveys.
India will review its official interest rate. South Korea and Turkey will report CPI inflation rates. Australia will report its Q3-GDP on Wednesday. And there will be many other PMI reports.
In fact, over the weekend, China said its official factory PMI made a tiny improvement to maintain its small expansion. It was its second 'positive' result in a row and its best since April. At the same time the minor positive reading for its services sector disappeared. Taken together, this paints a picture of an economy without any expansion. We will get the Caixin PMI data tomorrow, and that has tended to be marginally more positive recently.
In Japan, their central bank boss said they are "approaching" a decision with a view they will raise their policy rate from the current 0.25% to 0.50%. They like their current data track, but they hesitate because they don't have a firm fix on the damage the incoming US Administration will do.
"I am not worried much about Japan's financial system because ample capital, stable deposits and access to liquidity have been ensured," he said. In contrast, he noted that "non-bank financial institutions are posing a grave problem" in the US and added that "they deserve to be closely monitored."
Japanese consumer sentiment recovered somewhat in November, still positive, but nothing like what they had from December to March earlier in the year.
Japanese retail sales rose +1.6% in October, recovering from the weak September expansion, but still much lower than what they have achieved monthly since early 2022. At least it is back heading in the "right" direction.
And Japanese industrial production rose +1.6% in October from a year ago, ending two months of retreat.
South Korea's industrial production rose in October at a very strong +6.3% pace from a year ago, after the unusual stumble in September, returning to the average expansion they have had since September 2023. So it will be no surprise to learn that their exports kept rising strongly in October, as did their imports. But in November, the expansion was more modest for exports, and their imports actually slipped slightly.
However Korean retail sales slipped in October to be -0.8% lower than a year ago.
India's economic expansion is 'consolidating', delivering a somewhat disappointing Q3-2024 result. Their economy rose +5.4% from the previous year, slowing from the +6.7% expansion in Q2-2024 and well below market expectations of a +6.5% increase. It was their softest pace of growth since Q4-2022. Still, even at the latest lower rate, it is rising on a per capita basis.
This miss adds pressure on the Reserve Bank of India to cut its policy interest rate which currently stands at 6.5%. They review it next on Friday.
The Indian currency fell on the news to a record low against the USD. Although not a record low against the NZD, it is has been close to that since the whole period from end of 2020.
In the US, early reports from card companies and industry monitors show that in-store retail sales growth for Back Friday sales was quite modest - even disappointing - and up only +0.7% from the same day a year ago. But online sales activity burst higher, up more than +14% on the same basis.
In Canada, their Q3-2024 GDP growth came in +1.0% higher than a year ago, up +0.3 for the quarter. This was not enough to prevent a fall in per capita GDP. On that basis it fell -0.4% in the third quarter, which was the sixth consecutive quarterly decline.
In Europe, inflation expectations in the euro zone for the year ahead edged up slightly in October to 2.5%, and stayed steady for three years out at 2.1%, the ECB's monthly Consumer Expectations Survey showed
EU CPI inflation rose to 2.3% in October, up from 2.1% in September, but still clearly in a down-trend that started in November 2022.
In Russia, their currency suddenly fell over the weekend to near record lows (a record if you exclude the full invasion spike in 2022). The falls were not only vs the USD, but the Chinese yuan as well. The economic pressure on the Russian economy is mounting as it suffers severe distortions and indigestion, the longer it presses its invasion of Ukraine.
In Australia, private sector debt rose +6.1% in October from a year ago, driven primarily by business debt growth, up +8.3% on the same basis, but housing debt growth was up +5.3% too. Other personal debt only rose +2.2% in October. (From a Kiwi perspective, these are relatively fast rises. Late last week equivalent RBNZ data showed business debt rising only +1.1%, housing debt rising only +3.5%, and personal debt up only +1.7% in the year to October.)
In Australia there is some scepticism that their debt tide rise will be maintained.
And their housing market is showing signs of exhaustion. November data shows sales volumes -4.6% lower than a year ago. The largest drop in the volume of home sales has been in Sydney, where sales over the rolling quarter were estimated by CoreLogic to be more than -15% lower than a year ago. But that isn't easing their rental crisis where the vacancy rate is less than 1%.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.18%, unchanged from Saturday but down -23 bps from this time last week. The key 2-10 yield curve is still positive, but only by +2 bps. Their 1-5 curve inversion is inverted by -24 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is at -44 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.37% and up +1 bp. The China 10 year bond rate is unchanged at 2.04%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is still at 4.47%, but down -20 bps for the week, and back to where it was six weeks ago.
The price of gold will start today at US$2649/oz and down -US$10 from this time Saturday, and down -US$56 from this time last week.
Oil prices are little-changed, still just over US$68.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is just under US$72.50/bbl. A week ago these levels were $2.50/bbl higher, so a retreat from then.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 59.3 USc and up +10 bps from this time Saturday. But it is up +1c from this time last week. Against the Aussie we up +60 bps at 90.8 AUc. Against the euro we unchanged at 56 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just over 68.6, and little-changed from Saturday, up +50 bps from a week ago.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$97,372 and up a minor +0.3% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at +/- 0.9%.
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"About 244,000 metric tons of gold has been discovered to date (187,000 metric tons historically produced plus current underground reserves of 57,000 metric tons). All of the gold discovered thus far would fit in a cube that is 23 meters wide on every side." - U.S. Geological Survey
So roughly speaking this is a 0.45% increase in total gold. Quite significant.
Have done my research for black Friday and Christmas:
A new pair of tennis shoes. Getting today.
Pack of sports socks.
A better knife sharpener. I'll go to some charity shops and see if any are laying around.
I was trying to figure out what props up retail until I remembered Mum, who has 4 of every kitchen item (except for, regrettably, knife sharperners) and loves a good sale ;-)
A pair of shoes for me, to replace some that are falling apart. The timing is just convenient.
There's other stuff I want, but I'm guessing these prices will be something you can negotiate back down to before Xmas given how much they're being slashed in the first place.
I've been subscribing to the "buy it for life" principle for a few years now. I pay good money for good shit, and I take care of it so it lasts. I don't generally pay much attention to sales.
There are obvious downsides to this approach too; I never have the latest tech, and I wear the same clothes all the time. But these are minor considerations given the benefits. The hardest part is actually finding good quality stuff.
I only wear them because they have such a huge range of styles so you can get jeans that actually fit straight off the shelf. These days I have moved to the 541. They are of course made in different places all over the world for different markets so no doubt the quality does vary.
I feel sorry for kiwis having to buy clothes, sports gear and pretty much every other shopping (except quality produce) in NZ. Completely overpriced of course, and slim selection. Price of being on the ass end of the world I guess, compounded by a strong jandal and singlet culture going on.
Another new EV gets price slashed to $30,000 | Stuff
Deflation. Anyone else holding onto to old ICE cars and waiting waiting waiting in anticipation of even more discounting?
Yup the little Yaris will be gone by lunchtime (MIL car). Was going to buy a Y but elon too much of a dick-- waiting for this one to drop in NZ
Mark V Supra to be discontinued in 2025. I’ll be holding my 2021. With low KMs it can only go up.
https://www.news9live.com/auto/toyota-gr-supra-a90-final-edition-is-a-f…
Looking across the ditch, Victoria is in trouble. I wonder when NZ's $160B debt (plus all the off balance sheet debt) is due to be refinanced, and how much extra that is going to cost. An intrepid journalist might like to investigate .....
No end in sight to Victoria's crippling debt
Victoria is confronting an $86bn “debt time bomb” that will start detonating in four years, increasing the state’s already crippling interest bill by billions of dollars and making it even harder to fund basic health, education and transport services.
Just days after the Auditor-General sounded the alarm about Victoria’s finances and the Allan government’s “reactive” budget management, Treasury data confirms the debt crisis will significantly deepen between 2029 and 2034.
Treasury Corporation Victoria figures reveal during this five-year period, about $86bn of state debt must be refinanced, and with the cost of borrowing soaring on global markets, the state’s interest bill will spiral.
TCV data shows the average interest rate for the $86bn debt is around 2.4 per cent, a historically low rate attributed to a wave of cheap money that swept the world triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic.
The global cost of borrowing money is rising, and interest rates on refinancing the $86bn could average around 4.5 to 5 per cent
Ratings agency S&P Global says the cost of borrowing money is on the rise as the world moves into an “environment of potentially higher for longer interest rates” and this will drive Victoria’s interest bill upwards.
"I am not worried much about Japan's financial system because ample capital, stable deposits and access to liquidity have been ensured," he said. In contrast, he noted that "non-bank financial institutions are posing a grave problem" in the US and added that "they deserve to be closely monitored."
According to the FT, "China’s long-term bond yields have fallen below Japan’s for the first time, as investors bet that the world’s second-biggest economy will become bogged down by the deflation that has long afflicted its neighbour."
https://www.ft.com/content/d299727e-41a1-480b-a44d-780b290bc3c0
And it appears the JPY carry trade unwind is happening again. You won't hear this at the water cooler. People think it has no relevance to Aotearoa.
In China’s cities, vacant housing accounts for around 20 percent of the total, which is more than double the 9 percent rate of Japan in 1990. House prices are 20 times household income in China, versus 11 times in Japan in 1990, the report says. Property investment’s share of China’s GDP was also twice as big compared with Japan in 1990. Therefore, “the direct impact from a housing slump to the real economy would be bigger in China than in Japan,” the report says.
We have a problem
Country's first case of bird flu found on Otago egg farm
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/country/535429/country-s-first-case-of-bird-…
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