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Buyers remorse shows up in US economy; Warren Buffett sounds warning; Canada, Japan & India reveal good data; eyes on German election result; UST 10yr at 4.43%; gold and oil down; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI = 67.1

Economy / news
Buyers remorse shows up in US economy; Warren Buffett sounds warning; Canada, Japan & India reveal good data; eyes on German election result; UST 10yr at 4.43%; gold and oil down; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI = 67.1

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand with news that 100 days of mayhem has not only killed the global leadership position of the US, Americans themselves (consumers and business) are reacting by turning sharply defensive.

The US dollar is under pressure, Wall Street is down sharply, and benchmark bond yields are dropping hard.

However, before we get into that, the week ahead will bring a relatively light set of data. In the US it will mostly be about durable goods orders in January, a second revision for the US Q4-2024 GDP, and personal income & spending updates. Elsewhere India and Canada will also update their GDP and Australia will release its CPI data. There will be business and consumer confidence data for New Zealand at the end of the week too.

Over the weekend, the US February PMI shows that output growth is faltering and payrolls are declining, as optimism slumped as costs rise. Their services sector is now contracting and at a 2 year low, their factory sector is expanding however but only back to its mid-2024 levels.

And it isn't any better for American consumers. The final survey results for the University of Michigan consumer sentiment tracking have come in weaker than the 'flash' result which indicated a sharpish turn lower. In fact it is now -10% weaker than in January, -16% weaker than a year ago. American consumers are spooked. One reason is that they see higher inflation ahead. The final reading for this indicates consumer prices are expected to be +3.5% higher in a year, a worsening of the 'flash' February result we reported earlier of +3.3%.

January existing home sales slumped nearly -5% too from December, although they were up slightly from the same month a year ago. But the year-on-year improvement is being whittled back.

And new homes are likely to get more expensive in the US with global tariffs to be imposed on softwood timber.

Now more of Trump's billionaire backers are having second thoughts about what they funded. And about-to-retire Warren Buffett issued his shareholder letter over the weekend, with some clear criticisms of Trump and his tax-avoiding accomplices. Buffett said paying taxes is patriotic and essential for a functioning society, and his companies paid US$26.8 bln in 2024, alone 5% of all corporate taxes in the US - and far more than all the tech companies combined. Trump is going into bat to ensure those tech companies don't have to pay any taxes in the foreign countries they operate in.

In Canada retail sales volumes were up +2.5% in December, up +3.9% in value terms from a year ago. This is actually quite an impressive result. This will be an interesting metric to watch in future given the nationwide push by Canadians to shift away from buying American-made products in protest at the insults launched by the US President.

In Japan, they finally have inflation, real inflation this time. It climbed to 4.0% in January from 3.6% in the prior month, which is their highest reading since January 2023. Food prices rose at the steepest pace in 15 months up 7.8%, with fresh vegetables and fresh food contributing the most to the upturn. No doubt their central bank will react to this sharper than expected move.

Despite that, the Japanese February PMIs show improvements in activity in both their services and factory sectors, with their services sector expanding at a healthy rate for a developed economy, and their factory sector contracting less.

India is still expanding fast. Their February PMIs show a better-than-January rise for their services sector, and a weaker-than-January expansion for their factory sector. Both expansions are the envy of most other countries, even if it is from a low base.

The EU PMI survey for February recorded a small expansion, but it also records their fastest input cost inflation since April 2023. The overall expansion recorded is largely due a recovery in the German factory sector.

And speaking of Germany, they have been voting in federal elections this weekend. Counting is underway and it seems no party won a majority. The conservative CDU won the largest bloc and the far-right AfD came in second according to exit polling. But as all other parties have declared they won't work with the revivalist Nazi party, they are in for a long negotiation period trying to form an MMP government. A grand coalition remains a possibility.

In Australia, who will probably go to the polls themselves in May, their February PMIs report an improving economic activity situation, with their services activity at a six month high, and their factory PMI at a 27 month high. However, to be fair, neither levels are particularly strong compared to other countries.

The UST 10yr yield is at 4.43%, up +1 bp from Saturday at this time. The key 2-10 yield curve is marginally steeper at +23 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now at +11 bps and unchanged. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is flatter at +11 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.53% and unchanged from Saturday. The China 10 year bond rate is now at 1.73% and up +1 bp. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is now at 4.67%, also unchanged from Saturday.

The price of gold will start today at just under US$2935/oz and down -US$3 from Saturday.

Oil prices are down -50 USc at just under US$70.50/bbl in the US and the international Brent price is now just under US$74.50/bbl. These markets are looking at a future of lower demand and higher output and inventories.

The Kiwi dollar is now at 57.4 USc and down -10 bps from Saturday. Against the Aussie we are up +10 bps at 90.3 AUc. Against the euro we are down -20 bps at 54.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just over 67.1, and down -10 bps from Saturday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$95,618 and down -1.8% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at +/- 0.7%.

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31 Comments

The UST 10yr yield is at 4.43%, up +1 bp from Saturday at this time. The key 2-10 yield curve is marginally steeper at +23 bps.

NZ10Y 4.68% NZ2Y 3.76%. Our 10y is above the US while our 2y is below theirs. Why a 92 bps spread? 

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2yr reflects the market pricing in higher inflation due to Trump. 10yr reflects lower US long-term country risk.

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Elon Musks heel turn would make the WWE script writers swoon 

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What's he done now? I seem to have missed his latest drama.

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That's business as usual for Musk, what/where is the heel turn?

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And China is sending a very direct message to Aussie and NZ that is not positive, but can have significant economic implications. 

I hope the Aussie navy and air force were running anti-ship exercise profiles. 

It might be international waters and complying with international law, but it is not innocent, doing what they are entitled to do. If there is no intent to the exercise why not hold in the middle of the Indian ocean or the Pacific?

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Is it any different to au nz us navies sailing through the south china sea?

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Yes. We gave them notice when we did that. They purposefully didn't. It was clear to me they were doing three things:

 

1) illustrating they have a deep water navy now and can project power further from their shores, as I've said before, China views its natural sphere of influence as covering all of South-East Asia, Central & East Asia, and the Pacific. Long-term it is intolerable for them for Australia and NZ to be allied with the USA. They're showing us they can project power in our backyard.

2) testing our ability to spot them in case of a 'hot' war. How long did it take us to notice them?

3) purposefully being annoying - live fire exercises in the Tasman Sea with close to zero notice. It's clear this was done to demonstrate how easily they can suspend our ability to fly to and from Australia while remaining within international law. Imagine a world where Taiwan is part of China, and instead of just sailing through the South China Sea, we did live fire exercises suspending flights and shipping between Taiwan and the mainland. Extremely provocative.

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Neither NZ or Aussie will ever report how much we knew of these ships movements,

I suspect a lot more then you are reading about.

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Yes I'm sure. The Yanks were probably monitoring them the whole way and sharing with us via Five Eyes. Though that network may have been infiltrated somewhat, especially in the NZ 'soft underbelly' of the network. 

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It's a carefully-weighted reply, Murray.

But perhaps you can't see things as replies, because you can't/won't see the primary statement? 

No worse than others blaming everything on Trump, though - rather than asking why Trump? in the first place. 

As for calling surveys of optimism 'data'....

Edit - while I was writing that, the Person nailed it. Same with 'why did Putin invade?'... 

 

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And Buyandhodl gave the appropriate response. The way they did it is with menace. It was not a 'peaceful' transit by any measure of diplomacy.

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The Straits of Formosa are hardly short of  counterpart “allied” navy vessels. Posturing really. Been going on since the first Roosevelt’s battle ship diplomacy. Watch Richard Widmark in “The Bedford Incident” to see what could possibly go wrong.

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I have a 1:35 scale model of the Amokura - ex HMS Sparrow; put down an uprising in Zanzibar, her remains can still be seen in Kenepuru Sound.

it's been going on for a long time; they used to call it gunboat diplomacy...

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Gun boat diplomacy. That is correct. Not battleship diplomacy. Foxglove needs to review and think before pressing submit. Still it was pre-coffee.

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Plus, NZ gets upset that the Cook Islands are cozying up to China. Now you know how Russia felt with their neighbour being pushed into NATO. Rules based order, as long as those rules suit the West. 

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We're told that Kennedy faced down Khrushchev over the Bay of Pigs. Big win for the good guys. 

What isn't told, is the back-door deal to remove the US missiles from Turkey, which had caused the Russian move in the first place. 

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Yet it saw the beginning of the end for Khrushchev in same context that Afghanistan finalised Brezhnev. A good precedent and stimulant for Putin to persist with Ukraine perhaps?

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The Khrushchev demise led to Putin. 

Just sayin...

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Sean Keane didn’t really say what Trump would do in terms of interest rates, but he implied there was more risk on the downside via a market crash and central banks reducing rates. We may see 0.25% again  

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/markets-with-madison/waiting-to-fix…

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Its rate projections were a clear example of the bank meeting the market - Keane said we should expect to see more of that as it relied less on poor official data and more on real-time surveys and indicators.

“The data in New Zealand is of such questionable quality now that the Reserve Bank are looking at lots of other indicators.

“What the Reserve Bank is doing now is adopting some market practice.”

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"the revivalist Nazi party". What national socialism are they espousing? Their mixed marriage lesbian leader is a fan of Margaret Thatcher, hardly a national socialist! Everyone I don't like is a nazi political strategy?

https://www.reuters.com/article/world/margaret-thatcher-is-my-role-mode…

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Havent you clocked on yet?  Everyone to the right of the Left, is a Nazi.  Only the Left can restore DemocracyTM. All attempts to balance the Govt budget is "lining the pockets of billionaires".  ScienceTM must not be questioned.  You will parrot the correct lines, and obey! Or you will be thrown in jail for Hate SpeechTM

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A Labour councillor in the UK complained to the Police about Facebook posts from a constituent suggesting they resign following a scandal over leaked WhatsApp messages among Labour politicians. 
The police duly obliged. Was Orwell right or not?

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Now more of Trump's billionaire backers are having second thoughts about what they funded. 

More misinformation from this Leftist rag.  A two second google search clearly shows that Steve Cohen funded the Democrats.

https://gothamist.com/news/democrat-donors-ny-steve-cohen-verizon-airbnb

Does nobody bother to fact check anymore before pumping out anti-Trump rubbish? Do you think all your readers are simply stupid?  Hopefully the ones who pay their $99 are, because otherwise that will be embarrassing.  This crap is why nobody trusts the media any more.

 

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You don't have to be here KW (Do you think all your readers are simply stupid?)....just a few town hall meetings would back up this reporting over the weekend in USA?

Is it that you have no other things to do with your time..is the chapter meeting on tonight?

 

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Maybe he came here for some objective information on the economy but had to wade through faex to find it. 
Changing topic. I agree with the writers above that China is not doing anything we and our allies don’t do. However, in terms of the economy, the authoritarian Left in China, led by Xi, ruined the World economy with their feckless actions unleashing Covid on the World, then imprisoning their total population for a ridiculous length of time. They openly use slave labour.
You would expect to see Xi’s name all over these columns, just as you see the bad orange man’s name. So I want to ask- why is this? Is interest really politically neutral or is it just another socialist cover up of key issues?

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To a hammer everything looks like a nail. Confirmation bias.

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"...and his companies paid US$26.8 bln in 2024, alone 5% of all corporate taxes in the US".

 

$26.8 billion represents 5% of all US corporate tax? That can't be right surely.

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