Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with growing suggestions that the inflation surge may be topping out.
Remember, it is the July 4, Independence Day holiday in the US and financial markets are closed there.
Yesterday we noted than most of the top ten global commodities were falling in price now. Other key hard commodities like nickel, cobalt and tin are too, most essential for green energy projects. But not lithium yet even if its rise is now over. The overall slide in commodity prices are an indication that inflation's bite may be easing, and quite quickly.
Further, there are suggestions that the US may roll back some of its tariffs on Chinese imports, a Trump-era tax on Americans. (Only those drunk on MAGA propaganda thought they were a tax on the Chinese. US import volumes showed otherwise.) This could be significant too to arrest inflation.
China is feasting on cut-price Russian oil, gas and coal. It is helpful for China because their economy is struggling to regain momentum. Other suppliers like Iran are having to match the Russian discounts. That in turn is driving down West African oil prices. And Australian coal producers are having to make the same match. All these price declines in these key commodities are helping quell inflation globally.
In China, property developer Shimao Group has missed the interest and principal payment of a US$1 bln offshore bond due on Sunday, in the latest blow to China’s embattled property market.
To get their economy moving again, China has halved taxes on new car purchases.
And China has found more undeclared additives in what is being sold as "pure milk" products. And these are from the Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region. Propylene glycol is the additive; no mention of forced labour at these dairy farms of course.
In Europe, there is no relief for producer prices, up +36% from a year ago, with energy prices almost doubling and non-energy prices up about +17%. But this is May data so there is no evidence yet that it is topping out, even if other June data has subsequently suggested that.
High Russian gas prices has pushed German importers to the brink of collapse. But now the German government wants to add a rescue measure for energy companies such as Uniper in its energy security law and may end up acquiring a stake in the company.
German exports slipped slightly in May when a small rise was expected. But that was despite a virtual collapse of exports to Russia (down -30% in 2022) . Being able to post a 'hold' in such circumstances has to be a good win for Germany in the circumstances, although since 2014 they have weaned themselves off Russia as a customer to a very substantial extent.
The number of jobless people in Spain fell by -41,000 from a month earlier to just under 2.9 mln in June, their lowest since early in the 2008 GFC. That took their June jobless rate down to a still very high 13.4%.
Turkey's inflation rate rose for a 13th consecutive month to almost +80% higher than a year ago, its highest since 1998. This is what happens when a central bank chooses not to raise interest rates early enough. Meanwhile their currency dived further making the problem worse. Everything Erdogan does reveals he is incompetent.
In Australia, SkyCity’s Adelaide casino will be scrutinised via an independent review as part of a widening Australian crackdown on the gambling industry.
One of Australia's largest insurers, Suncorp, says costs are rising from 'the material hardening of the global reinsurance market following elevated natural hazard activity in recent years’. Their focus might be Australia, but Kiwi premium payers probably won't be forgotten in insurance repricing for rising natural hazard claims.
And staying in Australia, there was a big and unexpected jump in the number of residential building consents issued in May, up almost +10% from April when a -2% fall was expected. It is unclear how analysts could get that so wrong. Also rising is bank mortgage lending, up more than +2% in May from April, when a -2% fall was expected.
The UST 10yr yield starts today still down at 2.89%. The UST 2-10 rate curve is unchanged at just +5 bps and their 1-5 curve is still at +13 bps. Their 30 day-10yr curve is marginally steeper at +162 bps. The Australian ten year bond is +10 bps higher at 3.57%. The China Govt ten year bond is up +3 bps at 2.87%. And the New Zealand Govt ten year will start today down -8 bps at 3.63%.
Wall Street is closed for their holiday. Overnight European markets were mixed with London up +0.9% but Frankfurt down -0.3%. Yesterday Tokyo ended its Monday session up +0.8%, Hong Kong fell -0.1% while Shanghai was up +0.5%. The ASX200 ended its session up +1.1% and the NZX50 ended up +1.0%.
The price of gold is now down -US$5 at US$1808/oz.
And oil prices are up +US$2 at just over US$109/bbl in the US, while the international Brent price is just over US$113/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar will open today unchanged at 62.1 USc. Against the Australian dollar we are firmer at 91.5 AUc. Against the euro we are also unchanged at 59.6 euro cents. That means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 70.3 and marginally softer.
The bitcoin price has risen since this time yesterday and is now at US$19,904 and up +3.9%. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been moderate at +/-2.7%. The crypto lender Vauld, backed by Coinbase and Peter Thiel, is exploring a possible restructuring after becoming the latest cryptocurrency platform to freeze services.
The easiest place to stay up with event risk today is by following our Economic Calendar here ».
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12 Comments
More chinese property speculation defaults. Whats a Billion between friends and when will these have an impact on global debt...
Meanwhile the latest trend, glychol in milk. A country of trust.
Still greater & cheaper fuel supply from Russia and that in turn screws down other suppliers. Putin’s venture into Ukraine has done China no harm. Quite the opposite. The weaker Russia becomes, the stronger China becomes. Must soon be some old munitions and military hardware too for China to sell off to their old ally. Replacement of depleted ordnance and on, must be becoming critical. Nothing like making hay while the sun shines.
Stuff it, decided to buy on good news: lined up a small RKLB purchase for when markets open.
Quick everybody rush out and buy Suncorp's insurance. They are so selfless to highlight this for us.
"Elephant in the room: Reinsurance companies have incentives to over-report total losses (i.e., not insured) because that supports their business aims."
"This paper reviews 54 normalisation studies published 1998–2020 and finds little evidence to support claims that any part of the overall increase in global economic losses documented on climate time scales is attributable to human-caused changes in climate, reinforcing conclusions of recent assessments of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change."
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17477891.2020.1800440?journ…
"Results show a clear decreasing trend in both human and economic vulnerability, with global average mortality and economic loss rates that have dropped by 6.5 and nearly 5 times, respectively, from 1980–1989 to 2007–2016. We further show a clear negative relation between vulnerability and wealth, which is strongest at the lowest income levels."
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378019300378
"When aggregated by season, there is no trend in normalised losses from weather-related perils; in other words, after we normalise for changes we know to have taken place, no residual signal remains to be explained by changes in the occurrence of extreme weather events, regardless of cause. In sum, the rising cost of natural disasters is being driven by where and how we chose to live and with more people living in vulnerable locations with more to lose, natural disasters remain an important problem irrespective of a warming climate."
Normalised insurance losses from Australian natural disasters
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17477891.2019.1609406
I suggest you contact them before your mountain climbing trip today Profile -
Alps Glacier Collapse Kills Seven Amid Record Temperatures
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A record high temperature was logged at Italian glacier’s peak
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Global warming seen as linked to Marmolada mountain disaster
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https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-04/italian-alps-glacier…
Of course its global warming, man made what else could it be
Interesting. So we are getting better at avoiding loss of life and the financial impacts of events...?
This figure from the article seems to clearly show the number of events is certainly increasing...
https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0959378019300378-gr1.jpg
Reporting/definitions/assumptions, were not the same in the 80s. Coupled with improved technology - i.e. the accuracy of the measuring tools/devices has increased. Makes comparisons tricky at best. A lot of the "events" may just be due to better/different reporting. Or maybe events is just based on claims, in which case it could just be a case of more people being insured and claiming.
I can't say one way or the other, it's just that experience has taught me looking back more than about 10 years is fraught with difficulty when comparing apples with apples.
It is interesting isn't it? Local councils officially declare climate emergency, but then don't seem to know what that means from a policy stand point. I would expect them to begin expressing a roll/pull back from vulnerable areas. But no, it is more like BAU. The declaration is apparently just to look good and not actually do something substantial. Insurance companies being expected to take the hard line and refuse to insure people who choose to live where the floods will hit.
Exactly. Great handwringing fanfare & publicity in Christchurch endorsing a climate emergency. Quite the opposite though, no official announcement at all in fact, about purchasing land in Central Otago to build a wide bodied jet international airport. Had to be unearthed by ODT reporters in Dunedin. The hypocrisy is quite staggering.
The NZ labour market looks to have come off the boil with a 14% drop in new listings in Auckland and Wellington down 7%. Listings still strong, but that could change in the second half of the year, says Trade Me sales director.
Happens every time. People salivate that everybody will halve the cost of their properties, while the owners just shrug their shoulders, rent them out and come back in a couple of years.
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