
Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand, with news things are turning sour in the trenches of the US economy - for consumers, many non-prime corporate borrowers, and even investors in some local manufacturing they did at the behest of Trump.
But first in the week ahead our news will be dominated by the March quarter CPI release on Thursday. Japan, India and the UK will also release inflation updates this week. The central banks of Canada, the ECB, Turkey and Korea will be re-assessing their monetary policy settings, and obviously they will focused on how the global tariff war by the US will affect them, and the role monetary policy can play to mitigate the coming negative influences.
China will report its Q1-2025 GDP result, and Germany will report any changes in economic sentiment.
On Wall Street, the Q1-2025 earnings season will kick off and reports from the major financial institutions will come in early. There will be a lot of attention on them, especially if they start to report a bumpy ride from the economic uncertainty.
However, the big news over the weekend is that China is standing its ground. Beijing raised tariffs on American imports to 125% on Friday, hitting back against Trump's decision to hike duties on Chinese goods to 145%, and raising the stakes in the trade war. They repeated the "fight to the end" rhetoric, also saying they will "counterattack". "Even if the US continues to impose higher tariffs, it will no longer make economic sense and will become a joke in the history of world economy. At the current tariff level, there is no market acceptance for US goods exported to China."
One immediate consequence of all this is that investors are turning away from the US dollar as a safe haven. And perhaps turning away from US Treasuries too.
Equity markets seem to be ignoring a sharp change in US consumer sentiment. The University of Michigan survey plunged in April to its lowest level since June 2022 and well below what was anticipated. That's the fourth straight month of pullback, and this survey is now more than 30% lower since the November 2024 election. It is signaling growing worries about trade war developments that have oscillated over the course of the year.
American consumers report multiple warning signs that raise the risk of recession: expectations for business conditions, personal finances, incomes, inflation, and labour markets all continued to deteriorate this month. The gauge for current economic conditions fell along with the component measuring expectations which is now at its lowest since May 1980. Meanwhile, year-ahead inflation expectations surged to 6.7%, the highest reading since 1981, from 5% in March. The five-year inflation expectations gauge edged up to 4.4% from 4.1%.
To mitigate some of that, Trump cancelled his tariffs as they affect mobile phones, their components, computers and other electronics. Even for Trump, this is pretty odd. It is now very much cheaper to import iPhones and the like from China than make them in the US. There will be many investors, especially those who have started building out US manufacturing facilities at the behest of Trump, who are likely to be a touch unhappy with this flip-flop and they still have to pay 145% tariffs on their imported parts. Clearly Trump has zero idea about how tariffs work, although that is not news. Commerce Secretary Lutnick added confusion in a weekend interview saying the tech tariff cancellation will be temporary.
Meanwhile, March producer price inflation in the US actually eased to 2.7% its lowest in five months, aided by a sharp drop in energy costs. Without those fuel cost drops, the index would have risen slightly to 3.3%.
There are signs that lending activity is tightening sharply in the US. For two weeks, there have been no - zero - high yield leverage loans for corporates in the US. The funds making these loans are having sharp investor outflows, and banks have become quite risk averse. A credit crunch is underway for most non-prime borrowers. If it extends, there will be real trouble.
In Canada, not only are they rejecting American products and travel options now, a new trend is that they are net sellers of US real estate they had as holiday homes.
India released February industrial production data over the weekend and that showed growth decelerated sharply to +2.9% from a year ago, down from an upwardly revised +5.2% in January. Markets had expected a +4.0% rise in February, so this is a big miss and is the weakest expansion since August.
In China, their March new yuan loans came in at +¥3.6 tln, sharply higher than the +¥1.0 tln in February and slightly more than anticipated. New bank debt support is flowing as they intend, but to be fair it isn't overly different to the usual seasonal pattern. It is even less that the record March new-debt flows in March 2023 of +¥3.89 tln, but it is the second highest March level ever, and +17.8% more than March 2024. Foreign currency lending dived -34% however.
China's vehicle sales jumped in March from February to 2.9 mln units, but the near-term change is distorted by the Chinese New Year holiday period. NEVs rose to 1.2 mln of those units, now 42% of all sales. They seem to be on target to sell almost 33 mln vehicles in 2025, almost double the level in the US.
Meanwhile, State-linked Chinese funds (the 'home team') stepped in to rescue Chinese stocks last week. But it’s an expensive exercise, involving more than ¥7 tln so far and likely to have to go up much more than that. China's own credit crunch is coming at some point, but they can put it off a while yet.
Separately, China is also battling unusually cold weather at present with much travel in the north cancelled.
In Europe, German CPI inflation came in at 2.2% in March (2.3% on an EU harmonised basis), slightly lower than in February, and lower than expected. Food prices were up +3.0% and the price of services were up +3.5%. It is also falling energy costs that are keeping a lid on their inflation.
Coal and steel prices are falling, with the coal price now down to a level it first achieved in 2016.
The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.50%, up +1 bp from this time Saturday. A week ago it was 3.99% so a large move up since then. This is its highest level since mid-February. The key 2-10 yield curve is a little less steep, now at +52 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now +14 bps, slightly steeper. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is now +18 bps, unchanged. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.36% and down -6 bps from Saturday. The China 10 year bond rate is now at 1.65% and down -1 bp. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is unchanged at 4.78%. It is up +12 bps for the week.
Equity markets will be closely watched this week for signs of stress from the tariff wars. That is especially true of Wall Street, and the first of the March quarter earnings results will appear over the next few days. Maybe too soon for the April shocks to show up, but investors will be repricing vulnerable companies. Don't forget the P/E ratio of S&P500 companies is currently 19x. Futures trade suggests the S&P500 will open tomorrow up +0.6%.
The price of gold will start today at just on US$3236/oz, and up another +US$2 from Saturday, and yet another new record high. That is up +US$217 or +7.1% from this time last week.
Oil prices are unchanged from Saturday to be holding at US$61.50/bbl in the US and the international Brent price is now just over US$64.50/bbl. These are the same levels we had a week ago.
The Kiwi dollar is now at 58.3 USc, up +10 bps from Saturday at this time and the highest since mid-December. A week ago it was 55.6 USc so a mammoth +270 bps appreciation or +4.7%. Against the Aussie we are up +20 bps at 92.8 AUc. Against the euro we down -10 bps from Saturday at just on 51.3 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today now just over 66.9 and up marginally from Saturday, up +130 bps from a week ago.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$84,792 and firming, and up +1.2% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at +/- 1.3%.
[Due to staffing holidays, the video version of this review will not return until April 28, 2025.]
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12 Comments
You'd be a brave one to invest in manufacturing capacity based on what agent orange tweets on any given Sunday.
Trumps "Art of the Deal" meets a couple of millennia of Silk Road trading experience.
And don't forget about his skills at negotiating a peace deal in a war.
Oh yes and the countries lead by dictators, except China, are all excluded from his tarriffs! Got other sanctions doncha know? But really they're his mates and they might not like it! Meanwhile inside the US his childish vengence is wreaking havoc amongst the security and defence establishment, the legal establishment and so on.
I think Liz Cheney last year summed up the plight by saying “we’ve got to stop electing idiots.” The USA is floundering like a beached whale digging itself deeper into the sand. If Trump’s mantra is that it could not carry on then he is hardly incorrect but as PDK might put it, what use the change of captain if the iceberg is dead ahead, and the engines still full ahead.
His RE business is in debt big time to Russian individuals - that's plainly clear both with respect to his reluctance to release his tax returns; his reluctance to target Russia with specific tariffs or further sanctions; his reluctance to further support Ukraine; his inability to cut a deal over that war, because Russia/Putin has him over a barrel.
Hence, he's got to go after the US allies given they are the ones who he owes nothing to as Trump Corporation goes.
And why he's pumping his own DJT stock and meme coin as he owes (subject to appeals) E Jean Carroll $91 million and $502 million to NY state.
And the Russian 'bankers' (I suspect) remain closed until/subject to Trump doing Putin enough favours - and one that I suspect we'll see soon is Trump unfreezing the oligarchs assets that are sanctioned/held by the US. We should run a pool on when that will happen. Probably as soon as Putin and his oligarch mates have a chance to acquire Trump Tower when Donald defaults on those loans.
How long until the Dems in the Senate and Congress realise that's what's holding him back?
Give them that snippet and see what they do with it!
And the Russian 'bankers' (I suspect) remain closed until/subject to Trump doing Putin enough favours - and one that I suspect we'll see soon is Trump unfreezing the oligarchs assets that are sanctioned/held by the US. We should run a pool on when that will happen. Probably as soon as Putin and his oligarch mates have a chance to acquire Trump Tower when Donald defaults on those loans.
The timeline might be:
-Unfreeze their assets
-Have them foreclose on Trump Tower
-Refreeze their assets to get Trump Tower back again
Bam! No debts and still got the Tower (well, that could be the plan at least).
Mind you if the Russians take TrumpTower then the USA Govt then takes it back under the sanction regime (and give it back to Trump) so what’s he worried about…it gets rid of his creditor for him.
From the BBC:
"The White House has gone from clearly suggesting there would be no negotiation on the baseline 10% tariffs to offering exemptions to the very products causing the deficit the entire policy was supposed to solve.
This is a lot more than a "row back". Some have called it the "Art of the Repeal". The 4D chess has been replaced by someone playing one dimensional checkers, but unable to tell the difference between opposing pieces."
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cde2z6jpzp8o
Reminds me of that first term Trump staffer saying Trump wasn't playing 4D chess, they were just trying desperately to stop him from eating the pieces.
Thanks for the excellent summary, David.
Trump's policies are so blatantly disruptive, isolationist, and exceptionalist, that he is forcing much of the planet to look Eastward now.
Even traditional arch-rivals China, Japan and South Korea are looking at establishing serious trade channels - a no-brainer given their proximity and the belligerent behaviour of the Western hegemon.
The BRICS and the multipolar movement in general could have not dreamed of a more potent force to multiply their momentum than Admin #47.
The failed long-dated bond auction last week meant they had already created a bond crisis - the foreign buyers never fronted up to buy the longer-dated bonds - a sure sign that they have lost confidence in both the U$ economy and the U$ dollar as the reserve/default currency.
Within seconds of the failed auction, Bessent was obviously on the blower to Trump telling him to back down, hence the 90-day suspension.
He had just kicked another own-goal (Liz Truss style) that could have blown his credibility to pieces, along with much of the bond market too. It sounds like foreign buyers only purchased around 1.5% of the longer-dated treasuries.
As the extent of Trump and Soros-man Bessent's extraordinary bungling becomes almost impossible to miss, not only will other countries turn on them, but so too will the domestic corporations, farmers and SMEs.
Cheers
Col
Commerce Secretary Lutnick added confusion in a weekend interview saying the tech tariff cancellation will be temporary.
The semi-conductor sectoral tariff to come, but the sectoral tariff will also includes pharmaceuticals. And we'll get this announcement soon - in a month or so. So, they are off now but will be back on soon - in some form but not sure what. But they are positive it will be worked out.
EEKS. They have no idea.
And then the response regards the "Chinese peasants". OMG.
On the verge of out lampooning the Griswold family.
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