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Eyes on US labour market; US services in modest expansion; ditto China; Indian expansion strong; global container freight rates jump sharply; UST 10yr 4.20%; gold down and oil up; NZ$1 = 60.8 USc; TWI-5 = 69.4

Economy / news
Eyes on US labour market; US services in modest expansion; ditto China; Indian expansion strong; global container freight rates jump sharply; UST 10yr 4.20%; gold down and oil up; NZ$1 = 60.8 USc; TWI-5 = 69.4

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news the down-graded Fitch rating is costing the US higher wholesale interest rates. But to be fair, the benchmark UST 10 year yield is only back to what it was in late October, but that was a post GFC high.

And perhaps we should note a comment by Warren Buffet overnight: "There are some things people shouldn’t worry about," he said. "This is one."

In fact, the latest US earnings season company reports show that there is a definite shift to reinvest rising profits in new projects rather than returning money to shareholders. This is a big shift and a positive sign, probably an indication that the collective corporate view is that they will have no recession and that opportunity abounds.

Meanwhile, US jobless claims actually fell last week but not by as much as seasonal factors would have expected. (In seasonally adjusted terms there was a reported rise.) There are now 1.836 mln people on these benefits, unchanged in a week. The number of job cuts reported in July also fell, and to their lowest level in almost a year.

Remember, we get the US labour market reports for July tomorrow, and analysts expect non-farm payrolls to grow +200,000, similar to the June expansion.

And recall yesterday we noted that the US Markit manufacturing PMI "improved" slightly (contracted less) to be basically at a steady state helped by new orders. Today we can report that the equivalent survey for their services sector slipped to a lesser expansion. This one found a slower rise in new business despite sharper uptick in exports. It also found hiring that was slowing - still rising but at a slower pace.

Meanwhile, the widely-watched local ISM services PMI slipped as well, to a very similar level to the Markit expansion, and noting similar reasons.

At the same time, factory order data was released for the US for June, and that came in much better than it has been recently. Despite that however it wasn't enough to exceed the order levels of June a year ago (-0.2%) although if you exclude orders by their military, they are rising.

In China, the private Caixin services PMI has delivered a surprise, and a positive one. The official services PMI earlier recorded a fast-slowing sector. But this alternative survey paints the opposite picture. It rose in July back to a modest-to-moderate expansion from June’s five-month low, beating forecasts of a further slip. It was the seventh straight month of expansion in services activity supported by a small uptick in new orders, and a good expansion in their payroll numbers, the fastest pace in four months. New orders growth accelerated, despite foreign demand expanding at a minimal pace that was the slowest for six months.

They aren't now getting international orders, India is.

In India, new order growth remained high in their factory sector in July although the pace softened a little bit. However, they reported a near-record upturn in services exports spurring their fastest expansion in new services business since 2010.

And China is facing some urgent challenges to its food supply. The recent deadly rains have damaged crops and their rice harvest fell, the first time it has done that in five years. At the same time India, Russia and the UAE have recently announced rice export bans. Global rice prices are rising.

The English central bank raised its policy rate by the expected +25 bps to 5.25% which is a fourteenth consecutive increase and a 15 year high for them. But they probably have more to go; this new rate is lower than the US Fed and the RBNZ, and they have much higher inflation (7.9%) than either the US (3.0%) or NZ (6.0%). They are not expecting their inflation rate to retreat to its target range until 2025.

Australia's trade surplus had another stellar result in June, although nowhere near its record. It widened to a three-month high of +AU$11.3 bln in the month from a downwardly revised +AU$10.5 bln in May, beating market forecasts of an +AU$11 bln gain, even as exports fell but they fell less than imports.

And staying in Australia, their office vacancy rate has now risen to its highest level since 1996, at 12.8%. Vacancy rates are much higher in Melbourne especially, and Sydney. The Melbourne problem is exacerbated by significant overbuilding as well.

Perhaps reflecting the 'no recession' vibe and an uptick in global trade, containerised freight rates surprised has week with an almost +12% rise. Most of this was from outbound China freight to the US and Europe. But we didn't see an equivalent rise in bulk cargo rates.

The UST 10yr yield will start today at 4.20% and up +13 bps from this time yesterday and equalling their October high. Their key 2-10 yield curve inversion is much lower at -70 bps. Their 1-5 curve is lower at -110 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is down sharply to -118 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 4.13% and up +10 bps from yesterday. The China 10 year bond rate down -3 bps at 2.68%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is up +4 bps from yesterday to 4.83%.

Wall Street is just holding in its Thursday session with the S&P500 down a minor -0.2%. Overnight European markets closed down -0.6% across the board. Yesterday Tokyo ended its Thursday session down another -1.7%. Hong Kong fell another -0.5%. But Shanghai rose +0.6%. The ASX200 ended its Thursday session down -0.6% but the NZX50 ended down only another -0.2% with an afternoon recovery.

The price of gold will start today at US$1934/oz and down -US$3 from yesterday.

And oil prices are back up +US$2 at just over US$81/bbl in the US. The international Brent price is now just over US$85/bbl. Saudi Arabia said it might cut oil production more if the previous cuts fail to raise prices. But the world seems to need less these days, and higher prices just spur more alternatives.

The Kiwi dollar starts today slightly softer at just on 60.8 USc. Against the Aussie however we are also a bit softer at 92.8 AUc. Against the euro we are soft at 55.5 euro cents. That all means the TWI-5 has fallen another -10 bps to 69.4.

The bitcoin price is little-changed today since this time yesterday and is now at US$29,228 and up a mere +0.3%. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at just under +/- 0.7%.

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

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26 Comments

Those Aussie office vacancy numbers are incredible… that said, the lucky country tends to avoid the worst of it. 

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We are always a bit behind the rest of the world. Apparently Americans find it cute that we still have functioning malls instead of buying everything online. 

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On the GB CB Interest rate rise ....

Carsten Jung, a senior economist at the left-of-centre thinktank the IPPR, said the Bank was “already overdoing it” and interest rates “might well be more than a percentage point too high now”.

He said: “Countries like Spain have kept energy prices lower, temporarily limited rent increases and tackled excessively high profits through taxation. Their inflation rate has recently fallen back to target. The UK should take inspiration from their example.”

https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/sunak-under-pressure-bank-attaches-18…

Let the second paragraph sink in. Perhaps read it again.

In essence a completely different, almost opposite, approach to ours. Were this to become the norm worldwide, then the greedy behind greedflation would have to change their approach.

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Sounds good, but the last call from a sentence in that article tells us why we are ALL in the mess we are.

Threadneedle Street prompted calls for tax cuts and a package of support for the housing market...

Until that has been bludgeoned out of our economic thinking by much higher Debt costs, then don't expect anything different. In fact, Debt costs are about to go into overdrive. Simply because if that fails to happen, image where the cost of assets is going to go.

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I'm not convinced having the government control prices will end well. 

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Countries that controlled key prices appear to have done rather well to be fair. Meanwhile in NZ we attempt (and fail) to control prices by adjusting the price of money. It's laughable really.

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We controlled fuel prices through excise cuts, but eventually we had to put it back so we just delayed the inevitable. 

Call me old fashioned but I reckon we go with the tried and true method that has worked very well for the last 3 decades and seems to be working yet again. It just may take a bit longer due to the reckless monetary policies we had 3 years ago. 7% inflation is not a cause to panic and do weird shit, the reason we are in this mess is the panicking and weird shit. 

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The problem is Jimbo it is not working, and especially not working well! And the problem started well before those policies of three years ago. Today we have people who literally cannot afford to put a roof over their heads due to parasitic landlords fixated on unaffordable "market' rents. Young people today cannot generally aspire to own their own home because they are being bled dry by those parasitic landlords and their exorbitant rents. Government regulation is required in housing and banking, as well as other areas. The "free market" experiment is a failure and should be dumped, fast!

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Landlords? That misses the mark by a wide margin. Landlords are a symptom, not a cause. It's massive immigration, interest rates held low to encourage consumption in an economy threatening deflation, non citizens allowed a tax free party buying up houses, all creating out of control momentum. There are other factors too, but overpopulation of landlords is logical outcome of really stupid economic management, not a cause in itself!

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Landlords are both a symptom of the unregulated market and a causal factor for high rents. 

But the housing problem is also driven by those other factors which all point to the need for proper government regulation. But then when you get governments who are either in denial or just don't understand the problem, what hope is there? Any effort they would put in to fix it would likely make it worse!

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I'm talking about using the OCR to tame inflation, and it has actually worked pretty well. Whether you can use the OCR to create inflation is another story. 

In terms of housing, I reckon government regulation and unfair tax treatment is what got us into this mess. If it were easier to build a house then they would be cheaper, and if property investors paid more tax it wouldn't be so popular and speculative. I can't see any evidence that a fair free market wouldn't work (like it has for every other market), but we are miles away from a free housing market. 

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It was a lack of government regulation that got us into the mess. Gareth Vaughn linked a document yesterday on the history of banking in NZ which indicated that in the 1980s the Government removed a lot of the controls on banks (buying totally into the free market theory), and therein lies one of your prime causal factors.

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Was it easier to buy a house beforehand? I have heard you had to pretty much beg the bank manager and then pay extremely high interest. So yet another example of less regulation working, now it is much easier to get a loan (although Labour decided to make it hard again for no reason), and the loan is also cheaper. Yes that has led to more money and more demand, but had the supply of housing not been so constrained it wouldn't have been a problem. 

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Was it easier to buy a house beforehand? I have heard...

Going by overall home ownership percentage, months of income per deposit, average mortgage length, the fact a lot more homes used to be paid off by a single income, the fact that NZ's house prices recently went to the top of the worldwide house bubble list.

Yes I believe it was easier back then to own a house, and financialization of the housing market has been the biggest driver.

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In the 1980's the interest rates got pretty high post the de-regulation, not before it, and that document indicated that the de-regulation caused some issues in the banks (The BNZ almost collapsed and had to be rescued by the Government). Before that though I understand it was very stable and the only issue was the ability to service loans. 

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Just a hint of what de-regulation has done for NZ; Andrew Body & Simon Jensen in an article on this site today about Bank prudential regulation state "According to the OECD, in 1970 New Zealand labour productivity (real GDP per hour worked) was 40% more than the United Kingdom and over twice that of Turkey. Today our productivity is about the same as the UK and Turkey is more productive than us. Recent analysis by Treasury staff shows that since 1970, New Zealand’s productivity has reduced by about 38% compared to an average of countries in the OECD in 1970."

Now I'd bet they wouldn't have thought they were building a case for regulation, but it is clear that de-regulation is not a good thing. 

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 “Countries like Spain have kept energy prices lower, temporarily limited rent increases and tackled excessively high profits through taxation.

 But no mention of the fact that Spain has one of the highest unemployment rates in Europe. It seems an over regulated market is part of the problem.

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There is no doubt that some balance is required in regulation. Problem is there none here at the moment either.

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The yields shooting up is incredible,  talk about turnarounds 

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But, on the other side of the fence, Warren Buffett came out this morning, shrugging off Fitch's USA downgrade, confirming that Berkshire Hathaway is still buying $10 billion in Treasuries every Monday.   Link

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Farmgate milk price forecast revised down from a midpoint of $8/kgMS to $7/kgMS. That's huge. 

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Income underpinning the rural land banking ponzi scheme at risk.  Are bank collateral calls in the pipeline?

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Will NZ tighten it's belt, or build 4 lane highways?

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nah just blow the highway funds on handouts, the PGF, cycle lanes...

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India, Russia and UAE banning rice export? Got me thinking, how much rice is grown in Russia and UAE? I checked it out for UAE and apparently rice is actually grown there, but not seriously.

https://m.youtube.com/watchv=CLQSGaivh78&pp=ygUpSG93IGRvZXMgdGhlIFVBRSB…

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