Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand with news of an unexpected development in South Korea.
But first, dairy prices edged up slightly again in this morning's latest full dairy auction, but that doesn't really tell the story of this event properly. With the local milk production season now past its peak, lesser volumes were on offer. And buyers seem to have already stocked up for Christmas and Chinese New Year. So it will be no surprise to know that most commodities slipped in price today - apart from a +4.1% surge in the WMP price. Almost alone, this twisted the overall index to a +1.2% rise in USD terms, and a +1.6% rise in NZD terms.
In the US last week there was something of a surge in retail sales with the benchmark Redbook index rising 7.4% from the same week a year ago. Buying before Trump's tariff-tax seems to be becoming a thing. Black Friday was in both weeks, this year and last year.
Also rising more than expected were US job openings in the US. Their JOLTS report seems to show that October data ends a longish easing in the rising in hiring. It also shows that employees are less afraid to quit to find another job.
And more optimism is found in the RealClear Markets/TIPP survey for November.
And the US logistics industry seems to be settling into a positive phase with another good expansion in November.
Across the Pacific, we should note a rather stunning development in South Korea, our fourth largest trading partner. Martial law has been declared by their embattled President. It seems the 'anti-state forces' he is battling are internal ones in labour unions. Even members of his own party are opposing the declaration. Apparently his wife is a key influencer in this decision. His move looks very uncertain at this time, and legislators have voted against the move.
The South Korean currency, the Won, fell hard, back near Global Financial Crisis and Asian Financial Crisis levels.
In China, State media is talking up the rise in real estate sales transactions, both by households in some cities, and by developers.
And later today in Paris, French legislators will vote on whether to topple the Barnier government.
And also later today, the Aussie will release their Q3-2024 GDP result - which is expected to show a +1.1% expansion from the same quarter a year ago. That would be about the lowest since the pandemic.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.20%, up +2 bps from yesterday. The key 2-10 yield curve is still positive, but only by +4 bps. Their 1-5 curve inversion is inverted by -18 bps, which is less. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is also less, now at -34 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.34% and up +1 bp. The China 10 year bond rate is at 2.03% and up +2 bps. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now at 4.39%, and down -3 bps from yesterday.
Wall Street has opened its Tuesday session with the S&P500 little-changed. European markets were all up about +0.5%. Tokyo ended its Tuesday session up +1.9%. Hong Kong was up +1.0% and Shanghai was up +0.4%. Singapore was up +0.9%. The ASX200 ended up +0.6% but the NZX50 slipped -0.2% yesterday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2650/oz and up +US$10 from this time yesterday.
Oil prices are +US$2 higher at US$70/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is +US$1.50 higher at just over US$73.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 58.8 USc and unchanged from this time yesterday. Against the Aussie we down -20 bps at 90.8 AUc. Against the euro we have dipped -10 bps to 55.9 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 68.3, and down -10 bps from yesterday.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$95,045 and down -1.4% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has remained modest at +/- 1.5%.
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39 Comments
Reports that South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol says he will lift martial law after parliament voted to block it
History, eg July 2009, of dust ups and fisticuffs in the assembly. Still a rather volatile lot of politicians. Taiwan is similar. Both freed post WW2 from Japanese control. Korean was actually divided because neither the Western Allies nor Russia believed the nation as a whole, could get up and running once the Japanese exited. That, you would think, has caused more problems that it has solved.
Hogwash. Korea was divided because of its strategic position on the peninsula and it is the reason it has been subjected to invasion for centuries (i.e straddling much bigger neighbours of china, japan and russia)
The Americans stuffed it up because they literally chose the 38th parallel line based on a national geographic map without any thought. You can read into the significance yourself on how the Russians saw that as a ratification.
Disagree. Democracy is a product of societal strength. It recognises that talent can arise from any source, but cohesion is essential for survival. Selfishness, lust for power and greed undermine democracy. Democracy constrains the strongest (psychopaths?) and provides opportunities for the reticent as well. Democracy is inclusive, not divisive.
Te Pāti Māori MP named in the BBC’s the top 100 women of 2024
You belong to a little club KH
Why banks are so keen to push CO2 targets on farmers. Jacinda levels of kindness.
"Bankers will soon be able to claim credit for emissions they say their financing has helped avoid, as the world’s largest voluntary carbon accounting framework for the finance industry works on broadening standards."
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-12-03/bankers-to-start-inc…
Lord Orr blames the Ponzi on the media (and then rejects the blame in the same string of sentences) and says his actions saved us from 'deflation' (horrendous apparently) and / or depression.
He doesn't seem particularly insightful and / or concerned about how the focus on credit creation for non-productive purposes is part of the problem.
Given his status and power, he doesn't seem particularly convincing. In fact he seems to have become less so over time. All the color language / turn of phrase and confidence he used to have seem to be gone.
https://www.1news.co.nz/2024/12/04/reserve-banks-orr-on-housing-market-…
Not everyone agrees
"I'm going to keep arguing the Governor is acting illegally. His mandate is not to engineer booms & busts. He engineered a Covid boom that overcooked things; he engineered three post-Covid busts; now he's panicking again, trying to engineer another boom (as NZ ranks 180th out of 190 IMF countries in terms of how fast GDP is growing and the PM & Finance Minister are freaking out). The RBNZ is at it again. Super easy money policy; then way-too-tight; and now back to super easy again."
https://www.downtoearth.kiwi/post/westpac-s-chief-economist-backs-up-do…
"What people went and did with that money is a disappointment," Orr said of the cheap lending environment during the pandemic's height. "Too many people saw that as an opportunity to punt or stag the property market."
That is because you removed the LVR restrictions, basically giving investors the green light to load up on property! What did you think would happen?!
The South Korean love of XRP during this recent bull run is astounding. XRP/KRW volume hit $3.7B on Upbit (27.6% of exchange volume) + $1.2B on Bithumb (32%), while the KOSPI’s total daily volume was $6.32B.
XRP dominates the South Korean crypto market, outpacing BTC’s $340M volume.
Naturally it was dumped during the brief state of martial law.
We need to talk about KiwiRail🍋
Despite billions “invested” by government, its financial performance continues to deteriorate
We need to talk about KiwiRail🍋 - by Bronwyn Howell
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