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China's companies struggle; Taiwan export growth dips; India monsoon arrives early; US savings rate withers; Aussie retail sales grow fast; UST 10yr 2.74%; gold and oil unchanged; NZ$1 = 65.4 USc; TWI-5 = 72

Business / news
China's companies struggle; Taiwan export growth dips; India monsoon arrives early; US savings rate withers; Aussie retail sales grow fast; UST 10yr 2.74%; gold and oil unchanged; NZ$1 = 65.4 USc; TWI-5 = 72

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand with news China's pandemic struggles are seriously undermining their economic life and the long-term impacts seem to be getting worse.

But first, we should note that it is a long weekend holiday in the world's largest economy. But this is also an important retail shopping period when all that inventory in global supply chains has a chance of clearing. It might be the start of the northern hemisphere summer, but how consumers react with their spending decisions will be equally important.

Across the Pacific in Japan, Toyota has lowered its global production forecast for June by about 50,000 vehicles, to around 800,000, as parts shortages caused by the pandemic lockdown in Shanghai continue to disrupt them. In Japan, that will involve a five-day halt at 16 local production lines.

China reported that its industrial companies saw profits grow +3.5% in the four months January to April. In the three months January to March they grew +8.5%. That means the April-alone result was very tough for their industrial companies. Profits at industrial companies fell -8.5% year-on-year in April alone. High raw material prices and supply chain disruptions have significantly squeezed margins.

Their lock-down pain is spreading fast now. According to Moody's, China's property development sector and its related supply chain account for as much as 28% of the country's GDP. And the struggles and declines we have been reporting for more than a year have now turned into a rout. Even State-owned property companies are in big trouble. It will be virtually impossible for China to achieve its expansion target of +5.5% with its property sector imploding.

But some relief may be in sight. Over the weekend, both Shanghai and Beijing started easing lockdown conditions.

For all its export prowess, and that has been impressive through the whole pandemic stress, Taiwan reported that its Q1-2022 GDP expanded at "only" +3.1% real. That is a reversion to the levels it was achieving pre-pandemic since the GFC. During the pandemic period it peaked at as much as +9%.

Singapore reported that its producer prices rose very sharply in April, in fact the fastest rise they have had in more than 40 years. They are up almost +30% year-on-year.

In India, the all-important monsoon has arrived earlier than normal this year, raising hopes that their agriculture will get a timely boost. The country has been suffering from excessive heat recently and rain can't come soon enough. But the north may have to endure another month of the debilitating heat.

In the US, the consumer inflation measure the US Fed watches most closely, the PCE, dipped slightly in April, 'down' to 6.3% from March's +6.6%. Excluding food and fuel, it recorded its lowest level of the year, down to 4.9%. The same data showed that inflation-adjusted personal incomes were unchanged but consumption expenditures rose. That is the fourth straight rising month. The financial markets liked that consumers are continuing their spending at good levels and Wall Street rose strongly last week to book a better-than-average gain.

But perhaps those markets should look at the sharply falling savings rate. Spending faster than income is eating into that rate quite quickly now.

That strong consumer spending impulse is reflected in the April trade deficit, on a merchandise-only basis coming in at -US$105 bln. Still that was -15% lower than for March. With port backlogs clearing, that was always going to push this metric up. It is also pushing wholesale inventories up, and if supply chain stress eases it might result in a downstream impact where orders will need to be cut back to give time to absorb them. Then again, no-one will want to be caught in supply chain hell a second time, so inventories may stay at higher levels for quite some time.

Those free-spending American consumers aren't feeling that great however. The latest measure of consumer sentiment is now back down at GFC levels. This time, that is probably more to do with their culture wars than their economic opinion. It is the start of their 'driving season' (from Memorial Day to their Labor Day) and this year with petrol prices so high there are much changed expectations that Americans will take to the road this year to holiday. That may juice up stay-at-home retail volumes and reduce holiday destination revenues. It is unlikely spending will be curtailed, just shifted. Those pattern shifts will be closely watched. Beef demand may rise for stay-at-home barbeque season. This will likely open up trade opportunities for New Zealand. We may also benefit from their infant-formula shortage. Foodservice demand may slip.

Coming up this week, we will get their non-farm payrolls report, and it is expected to add +310,000 jobs while their jobless rate stay near its historically low level of 3.6%.

Australia reported that retail sales were up +0.9% month-on-month in April, a faster pace than the +9.6% year-on-year. These are gains financial markets were expecting. But this data is not inflation-adjusted, so that colours the results.

The World Bank has been surveying the efficiency of 370 of the world's major container ports, and the results are not good for New Zealand. Among others, Tauranga ranks about 325th and Auckland ranks about 350th. Even just among "Oceania", Auckland is the worst-ranking facility. No New Zealand port looks efficient in this survey, the "best" being Wellington ranked #151 and still near the bottom half.

The UST 10yr yield will start today at 2.74% and it likely to move little while the US is on holiday. The UST 2-10 rate curve is little-changed at +26 bps and their 1-5 curve is holding at +73 bps. Their 30 day-10yr curve is also holding at +204 bps. The Australian ten year bond is now at 3.25% and unchanged. The China Govt ten year bond is unchanged at 2.76%. And the New Zealand Govt ten year will start the week at 3.52%.

Wall Street has finished last week strongly with the S&P500 up another strong +2.1% in Friday trade and for the full week it has risen a rather tasty +5.7%. The NASDAQ recovered to rise more than +6% for the week. The ASX200 ended its Friday session up +1.1% allowing it to record a +0.6% weekly gain, while the NZX50 was the weakest of all, falling -0.3% yesterday and shedding -1.8% for the week.

The price of gold is unchanged today at US$1854/oz. But that is a +US$10 rise in a week.

And oil prices are little-changed from this time Saturday and still just over US$114/bbl in the US, while the international Brent price is now just over US$115.50/bbl. These are both +US$4/bbl weekly rises.

The Kiwi dollar will open today at 65.4 USc. Against the Australian dollar we are at 91.3 AUc. Against the euro we are at 60.9 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 72 and near its highest of the month.

The bitcoin price has risen +2.4% since this time Saturday and is now at US$29,182. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at +/- 1.1%.

The easiest place to stay up with event risk today is by following our Economic Calendar here ».

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24 Comments

Housing ponzi has busted.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10862005/Sellers-slashing-pric…

Here in  NZ, it started few weeks before with fall of 10% to 15% but today anyone buying a house should offer/buy minimum 20% down from peak price. As during height of ponzi buyer were paying premium on top of premium as were expecting  future price to risese, similarly today buyer should offer low price from already lower price, expecting the price to fall further.

As a guide appox 20% to 40% below inflated RV released in Auckland. Some old 3 bed one bath house on 600sqmt section had jumped from $850000 to 1.4 million or 1.6 million deserves bigger fall and units/ town houses that had moved up  from $650000 to million too should fall relatively.

A colleague looking for a house in East Auckland just put an offer of $900000  to a property that has a CV of 1.1million and when appraised in February was near around 1.2million - Auction failed in April and all interest was near million but vendor resisted and now in May after three months as has to sell sold near $900000, vendor had  bought few years back in 2018 for high 800s.

Truly downturn has just started to pick momentum.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/128740312/construction-probably-enteri…

If professional builders are having problem, can imagine the plight of mum and dad builders or small businesses which diverted funds from their business to being builder for easy, fast and big gain as a result over exposed themselves in greed by borrowing in extreme. 

Demonstration effect along with FOMO blinded many and what seems to be an opportunity of a life time has turned into nightmare except those who sold and got out of market when it was at peak and are laughing all the way to the bank.

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Not quite busted yet but getting there. The example you give still provides a profit. So not yet a loss. Largely a repeat of earlier boom and bust cycles, just took a little longer to get there.

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..after fees and funding the neg geared mortgage Id say a loss alright.

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Well if some puts down a $200k deposit and has a $700k mortgage this will still likely be costing $49k interest alone in a years time.

the rent is unlikely to cover that let alone the outgoings and new tax on income

I would think they have a lot further to fall!

I still think we are looking at 60-70% falls so that would make it worth around $500k at which point it’s still a pretty negligible investment. 

interesting times… starting to look like a ponzi to me!

 

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12

Know of nice brick and tile house in a nice coldesac in Green Bay that just sold 20% under latest RV

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6

Coldesac? Does it face away from the sun?

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15

First Solomons, then Samoa.  Fiji seems to have achieved a better buy price from Australia than China, no doubt leveraging the latter against the former.

Still, makes ya wonder what our Foreign Affairs apparatchiks, let alone the zero-visibility Minister, were doing, when Blind Freddy could have seen this all coming years ago, and built relationships and offered Munny to forestall it.

But perhaps it all seems too - er - Colonising to be purchasing the affections of small vulnerable island nations with new-century trinkets.....

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6

Ya don't have to bribe the whole of the islands.  Just the Prime Ministers and some cabinet. 

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20

And the Clergy - or the scourge of the islands - as I like to refer to them.

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These small nations might have to learn from their mistakes. They already see NZ/Aus as condescending colonists. 

I don't doubt they'll regret getting closer to China.

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10

Indeed. Mongolia and Tibet are good examples of what China really wants.

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A lot of Pacific Islanders can trace their genetic lineage back to Taiwan a couple thousand years ago, it all fits.

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Ask one or two African countries. China has just replaced the original colonists there.

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There is no property or asset cycle, there is a credit cycle. Follow the predictable expansion and contraction of credit and you can invest in whatever you choose and ignore a lot of noise.

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8

The expansion of credit over the last 2 years was not predictable.    Nor was it like anything we have seen before in a NZ credit cycle.

We are not in a normal credit cycle right now.     We are in an "up 30% in a year then catastrophic bust" cycle. 

Uncharted territory, unless you look to somewhere like pre-bust Japan or the Irish Celtic Tiger years for the road map.

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11

exactly! many here have been warning of the consequences of such loose monetary policies and now we are at a very predictable junction

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“Ultimately there’s no natural income streams to be able to service and repay loans. What you have is capital gains which are contingent on the game continuing. So it’s a Ponzi scheme. says Werner. - https://wire.insiderfinance.io/richard-werner-qe-infinity-707e2c627e03

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A balanced article from NZ herald on our involvement in the Ukraine conflict. 

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/nz-entering-ukraine-conflict-at-whim-of-g…

 

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Those free-spending American consumers aren't feeling that great however.

Inventory Flood Continues Just As Consumers Tap Out

f it continues to play out the same way, it would be all the worst scenarios lumped together all at the same time. A real unfortunate convergence, yet one that has been entirely predictable.

Consumers reaching their absolute spending limits. Warehouse and storage capacity nationwide dwindling to long-time lows, leaving firms no options to store inbound goods. And, of course, the stream of goods into inventory that shows no signs (yet) of letting up.

Taking the last one first, today the Census Bureau reported its advanced estimates for wholesale and retail inventories. To start with, the figures for March were already excessive; in retail, the month-over-month change (seasonally-adjusted) had been the second highest on record, behind only December.

The revision for March nearly doubled the monthly rate.

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You can see that happening here, goods are taking so long to be shipped to NZ and by the time they arrive will there be any buyers? I'm in the market for furniture, some furniture items I'm being told won't arrive until November/December... I see discounting already being done prior to the arrival of the furniture - in some cases 50% off. A scarey time for these companies...

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It's universal too; I tried to order an item from the US - advertised as being in stock. Got a nice email saying 'not in stock, don't know when'. But it's still advertised as being available......

 

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Its a real crap shoot on inventory, we ended up doubling ours over the last 12 months just filling holes created by massive shipping delays then existing orders arriving after the season ended. Ordering 8 - 10 months out we have to take a gamble on the economy, logistics freeing up, and people still wanting the stuff. I am predicting down down down November onwards... worst case scenario is we run out of stock, albeit with cash in the bank....  maybe

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I was talking to a draftsman in a builder's office that I got to build a house nearly 2 years ago. He said that the timber shortage is no more but they still have problems getting Gib and cladding. They are going out of bespoke houses and into relocatables so that they can build a house, know what the house has cost and on sell it at a profit.

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Thanks for posting.

That points to some inflation too. Higher holding costs, more wastage, requiring more margin to offset.

Will be embedded until the memory of the supply chain  issues fades... like previous lessons.

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