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Strong US dollar causing growing stress; China eyes ever-more stimulus; eyes on Italian election; US factories get rising new orders; key commodity prices fall; UST 10yr 3.69%; gold and oil steady after falls; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI-5 = 67.9

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Strong US dollar causing growing stress; China eyes ever-more stimulus; eyes on Italian election; US factories get rising new orders; key commodity prices fall; UST 10yr 3.69%; gold and oil steady after falls; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI-5 = 67.9

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand*, with news the US dollar has hit a 20 year high on global recession fears, and that is causing issues around the world, including for New Zealand.

It won't make getting our inflation back under control any easier given how much is cause by the tradeables sector.

In the wider Asian region the strong US dollar will hurt. The yuan makes up more than a quarter of the weighting of Asian currency indexes. And the Japanese yen is the third-most-traded global currency, so its weakness has had an outsized impact on its Asian counterparts. 

At the same time the Chinese economy is shrinking. And it will soon take further steps to bolster consumption.

In China, home loan interest rates have dropped to record-low levels in at least 80 major Chinese cities, as financial regulators endeavour to keep the property market afloat. In September, over 80% of 103 key cities surveyed show first home loan rates have fallen to 4.1%, while second home loan rates have fallen to 4.9%.

Singapore's annual inflation rose to 7.5% in August which was above the 7.2% expected by analysts, and above the 7.0% they had in July. Generally ASEAN inflation is something to keep an eye on, and the surging US dollar won't be helping. Malaysia's inflation is rising and is at 4.7%. Indonesia is also at 4.7%. Thailand is at 7.9%.

Taiwan's inflation rate is low (like China's) and currently running at 2.8%. But their retail sales activity expanded +12% from a year ago, and their industrial production is up at record levels.

In Italy, they are voting, deciding whether to choose their most right-wing government since WWII. It's an election being followed in Europe. Giorgia Meloni leads the far-right Brothers of Italy party and is aiming to become the country's first female prime minister, allied with two other parties on the right. We will know exit poll indications tomorrow.

Staying with parties of the Right, new tax cuts and outsized public spending and subsidies in the UK seem to have crashed the British currency. What they will do for their economy is uncertain, but it is a huge 'experiment' that markets are judging will have an unhappy ending. Nouriel Roubini says this will end in an IMF bailout of the country.

There were a couple of early PMIs out over the weekend. The American one reported that private sector output fell at softer pace as new orders returned to growth in September. Their factory sector expanded in September, but their services sector didn't even if the contraction was very minor. The American economy may be doing better than the financial markets because higher interest rates cause a revaluation down of financial instruments (and cause losses) whereas the real economy responds to consumer signals, not Wall Street signals.

Canada reported retail sales activity for July overnight and it wasn't positive with both month-on-month declines (their first in seven months) and year-on-year retreats.

The early Eurozone PMI for September reported a steeper downturn as price pressures intensified. Both their factory and service sectors are contracting this month, but the quantum is quite small at this stage. The negative impacts are strongest in Germany. The French activity is positive and helping to hold up the overall results.

Early Australian PMI indexes show their factory sector expanding at a good pace in September and faster than in August. But their services sector is not mirroring that, more or less marking time.

But much of Australia is exposed to mining, and commodity prices are retreating. Now credit rating firm Moody’s has changed its outlook for the global metals and mining Industry from stable to negative as a global economic slowdown continues to soften demand.

Over the past week, the price of copper has fallen -2.8%. Over the past month it is down -8.4%. For aluminium it is -5.6% and -10.1% respectively. For iron ore it is-2.0% and -8.2% respectively. But there are others still rising, like nickel which is down -5.5% in a week but up +8.9% in a month. Then there is coal, up marginally this past week and up +4.5% in a month. Wheat is up a sharpish +6.7% over the past week and up +12.1% over the past month.

The UST 10yr yield starts today at 3.69% and marginally lower than this time Saturday but it has still been a +23 bps gain in a week. The UST 2-10 rate curve is more inverted at -52 bps. But their 1-5 curve is much less inverted at -13 bps. And their 30 day-10yr curve is essentially unchanged +104 bps. The Australian ten year bond is higher, up +3 bps at 3.94%. The China Govt ten year bond is unchanged at 2.71%. And the New Zealand Govt ten year will start today at 4.16%, up +16 bps from this time Friday but unchanged from Saturday.

The price of gold will open today at US$1645/oz. This is up +US$3 from this time Saturday.

And oil prices start today still much lower at just under US79.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price has risen about +US$1 to be just under US$86/bbl. These are still about eight month lows.

The Kiwi dollar will open today at just on 57.4 USc. This is its lowest since briefly in the first few days of the first pandemic lockdown, and prior to that 13 years ago. Against the Australian dollar we softer at just under 88 AUc and still near its lowest in seven years. Against the euro we are little-changed at just under 59.3 euro cents. Against the yuan we are down under ¥4.1 and its lowest since 2015 (except the pandemic) .That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 67.9, and down -50 bps to a seven year low (also pandemic-excepted).

The bitcoin price is now at US$18,981 and up +1.2% from this time Saturday. It has been under US$20,000 for eight straight days now. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at just on +/- 0.9%.

* It is a public holiday in New Zealand today. Markets here are closed.

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

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42 Comments

The dollar being back where we were when the whole country was shuttered for unknown periods of time should tell you how much confidence there is that things will get better any time soon, given we are now apparently open for business. 

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You're only as good as your last set of financials and NZ's will still be looking sick for at least another 12 months. Or maybe 24 - i.e. 2 tourist seasons.

Assuming Putin keeps helping Europe shit the bed, and countries start defaulting in Asia, the Middle East, and other parts of the developing world, long term NZ should be a pretty good bet.  

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Tourism isn't coming back unless the cost of flights comes down.

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For it to come back 100%, you'd probably need China to abandon it's Covid policy.

Prices will stabilise as Airlines reclaim capacity they furloughed.

Everywhere is up from zero.

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That's a good assessment. 

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A lot of Brits may be realising what they have lost in their last PM, was a steadying force 

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Or they have come to the realization the system is flawed

The only constants seem to be a perpetual sense of crisis and the feeling that, no matter how bad it gets, Tory government remains Britain’s default position. Amid recession, mounting poverty and the prospect of a sterling crisis, almost no one ever mentions a glaring system failure: the fact that we are routinely governed by people with only the flimsiest of electoral mandates, if they have one at all.

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I guess that slim margins will not happen in Putins Initiated Referenda

The poor poor people of Ukraine don't deserve having to fight for their lives and existence. If you are inclined, pray for Ukraine's freedom.

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If you are otherwise inclined, you can pay for Ukraine's freedom:

https://u24.gov.ua/

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Flying High.  If you value peoples freedom you could condemn Ukraine for shelling them in Donetsk since 2014.

Being shelled by Ukraine ain't free. 

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Are you talking about the "Wagner Group" invasion of the Ukrainian Donbas region, that was being responded to by the Ukrainian military?

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Why only in Australia, it happens all the time in NZ.

Should have a law around it

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/sep/24/price-baiting-th…

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A few  RE agents in my area are repeat offenders for something similar.

I'll put in a search to say $900k max, then order from highest to lowest. A property I like will be sitting around other properties at $700K.

I'll then email the agent asking for a price indication which always comes back at something like $1.1m. 

I think they do it to make the stats they report to vendor look good. I.e "we've had 30 enquiries this week" but only because they made people think it was cheaper.

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The old 'Price by Negotiation' where the expected price is $1.5m but you find it listed around the $1m and $1.1m searches. 

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Also if they can get you in the door, you can maybe reach a higher. Increases the pool of buyers and gets more people at open homes too. Win win win i guess! There should be rules around this for sure.

We’d be much better off if properties were just priced from the start.

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In a lot of other countries it's the REA's job to tell you what you're house is worth in the current market. Why they get more commission in NZ is beyond me. Average UK commission is about 1.2%. Open homes rather than appts seems a lazy way of doing it too.

 

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Just sold a house in the UK for a little under 0.8%, including VAT. Plus another ~0.6% solicitors/legal fees, job done. 

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The whole "photos on the billboards" thing is weird too.  Why do I want to know what the gurning REA looks like? Show me the house instead!

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Along with that it's always "team Joe Bloggs".

One person is not a team!

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Not familiar with what a gurning REA is. But it doesn't sound very good!

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I agree.  I don't go to an open home now without knowing the seller's pricing expectations - it's just a waste of my time.

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The power is now with the buyer. It has been entertaining to see the look on the face of an agent when you mention you’re a cash buyer, and then the change when you tell them you wouldn’t pay what they’re asking, and that maybe the vendors need to accept the current market is not what it was 6 months ago. 

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Not only buyers but even vendors are being taken for a ride by real estate who are desperate for listing.

Many experienced agents may be be are giving realistic appraisal and not listing  but some agents are still giving high appraisal  to get listing as a result vendor spends money and time along with buyer and in current market after two or three months, vendor  is more on back foot.

A property purchased last year at peak for 1.150 was put up in Market this year  to sell in February/March but was unable and was withdrawn after three/four months (In last stage of marketing, agent was asking anything above 1.1 million though wanted between 1.150 to 1.175 Million to cover the vendor).

With a gap of few months the property has been relisted by another agent and ideally should have been at lower price as market has shifted from March - minimum 10% to 15% if not more and agent should have advised accordingly but seems agent has appraised what the vendor wanted to hear despite other better properties in that area going near million and are better properties, also high CV.

On checking other properties by this agent realize that has another property listed in same street but is being withdrawn by vendor just after few weeks as must have realized the appraisal given by the agent is nowhere near the market.

This was in Manukau. Even if ask million plus can justify and try in this market to sell  but this seller too will have to withdraw unless he is ready to take a hit.

Highlighting as it is not only the buyers but even vendors specially in falling market are facing - no accountability.

Another 4bedroom/2 Bathroom Townhouse in eastern Auckland is being withdrawn after few months - excellent location but doup property and vendor not ready to accept or may be can hold for few years or may be will list again with new agent.

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Yes, the pattern of setting the 'indicative price' low to manipulate filters is quite clearly misleading advertising, which is illegal.

This is aggravated by each agency showing a pattern of doing it for a long period, and agents have usually given vendors an 'expected market range' that does not overlap with the pricing set for website filters, showing they are deliberately setting this low.

 

One of those things I've long thought I'd litigate if I could be bothered being litigious, after that, I'll move onto Subway selling 6-inch instead of 15cm sandwiches :) 

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I'm pretty sure that there was a Court case on this a few years ago which held that "buyer enquiry over" was an "offer to treat" or similar & therefore the agent was fraudulent to come back with something like "the vendor wants at least $100k more than that"

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Six inches is bigger than 150cm officebound… by 2.4mm

just saying 

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Slightly unrelated to this briefing but given how many strong opinions are held by commentators on housing I thought I would share. It seems this is not just an NZ problem. Thoughts?

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/25/upshot/starter-home-prices.html

 

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Over to Russia.

Dodge the draft. Putin's  decree is getting bad publicity. Its a real war, unlike Crimea, and ukrainians do fight and win.

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1.0783 at the moment . "Bank of England urged to intervene to protect credit rating"

If that rating gives way, I shudder to think where interest rates are going. And it's unlikely we will avoid the contagion.

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the brits arent only crashing their currency,they are changing from paper to plastic.so if you have a stash of the old paper notes you have a problem as they wont be legal tender next week.

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"Crashing their currency"

 

You mean how the current GBP value is same as 3 weeks ago, and several other occasions in last year?

 

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I assume you mean against the NZ$? Which is staring the same 'solution' in the face - much higher interest rates.

The pound slid to a new 37-year low on Sunday night as Asian markets meted out more punishment

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Or the USD...

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Currently, 1.0500; Low this morn 1.0450 (Didn't see the quoted rate below. Must have been quick!)

 

22nd Sept 1.1250

13th Sept 1.1500

1st Sept 1.1525 , call that 3 weeks ago

25th Aug 1.1850

10th Aug 1.2225

This time last year? 1.3700.

The pound plunged nearly 5% at one point to $1.0327, breaking below 1985 lows as belief in Britain’s economic management and assets evaporated. Even after stumbling back to $1.05, the currency was down 7% in two sessions.

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This comment aged like milk

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Wow, looks like we are heading towards a s**t storm…

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Its going to be very very messy.

Our potential way out is a rapid change of tax rules to attract tech, productive businesses and high skilled people (probably nurses, doctors and teachers to)  from the uk and other failing economies.. to move to nz.

We would potentially put some form of a floor on the housing crash (by creating at least some cashed up demand) and give a way to reorient the economy away from residential property before that collapses and takes the rest with it.

Unfortunately our government is too preoccupied with crises of their own making to consider a strategy.

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Our potential way out is a rapid change of tax rules to attract tech, productive businesses and high skilled people (probably nurses, doctors and teachers to)  from the uk and other failing economies.. to move to nz.

I think this narrative is a bit played out. Not going to happen at this late stage. 

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Brilliant parody of a British politician by this comedian on 'benefitting the rich'.

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Very good article about the dysfunction at Immigration NZ and the public sector. Nothing in here shall come as any surprise. The quotes are wonderful. 

“They tend to throw people and spreadsheets at problems, but the leadership is very poor."

“The whole system is just poorly run, it’s cobbled together, they’ve got three independent systems ... it’s just a hodge-podge of years of mismanagement.”

“You can throw as many people as you want at a process, but if the process itself is inefficient and broken, it doesn’t really matter.” 

https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/129772687/inside-the-delays-at-immigra…

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Anything that stops the ridiculous population growth nonsense, is worth a vote in my book. 

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