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Dairy prices firm; global PMIs weaker; China keeps the stimulus going; sovereign wealth funds struggle; commercial property debt worries rise; UST 10yr 3.95%; gold unchanged and oil lower; NZ$1 = 62.5 USc; TWI-5 = 70.6

Economy / news
Dairy prices firm; global PMIs weaker; China keeps the stimulus going; sovereign wealth funds struggle; commercial property debt worries rise; UST 10yr 3.95%; gold unchanged and oil lower; NZ$1 = 62.5 USc; TWI-5 = 70.6

Here's our summary of key economic events over the holiday period that affect New Zealand, with another quick news wrap-up so you can get back to 'time-off'.

First, we kick off the New Year with another dairy auction, this one again modestly positive. The key WMP price was up +2.5% from the prior event. Butter was up +2.1%. But both cheddar cheese and SMP eased. Overall the result was +1.2% higher than the prior event in USD terms, up +1.5% in NZD terms as the Kiwi dollar slipped in its first trading of the New Year. Volumes sold were modest. Demand from China for WMP and butter was ok, but these buyers were quiet for SMP indicating their foodservice demand remains subdued.

There were final December factory PMI's released everywhere over the past few days and these paint an overall picture of weaker demand and both output and employment levels slipping lower. Of more of a worry perhaps is that neither input nor output prices are receding, suggesting price inflation will be hard to contain.

In the key US economy, their factory PMI was weak with a renewed contraction in output as orders fall at sharper pace. They also reported a rise in producer inflation.

As has become standard recently, there are mixed signals coming out of China. The private Caixin factory PMI is expanding but barely and didn't show the retreat expected. But it is displaying a yo-yo tendency around a steady state. However the official PMI does show an extended contraction by their factory sector. The Caixin survey tends to focus on mid-sized private companies. The official survey is more attuned to larger State-owned factories. And that is now contracting at the same rate as June 2023, and has contracted consistently since April 2023.

Unfortunately for them, their services sector isn't picking up the slack. Yes, it is expanding - just - but not be enough that anyone would notice. December is the third month in a row that the official services PMI has failed to fire.

The Chinese central bank has used its controversial Pledged Supplemental Lending program to inject NZ$80 bln extra into property lending support.

South Korean exports rose +5.1% from a year earlier to a 17-month high of US$58 bln in December. Shipments to the US rose +21% but they fell -3% to China, Korea's top export market. But the  overall result was lower than expected and lower than the +7.7% gain in the previous month. But it was the third consecutive month of increase in exports, and has been driven by a rise in semiconductor exports. Meanwhile, South Korean imports fell rather sharply, down -11% mainly on lower oil prices. Compared to the recent nine straight months, imports are tracking a stable path.

It has been a very tough few days in Japan, first with having to deal with a deadly earthquake mid-winter. Now an Airbus aircraft from a domestic flight caught fire on a Tokyo airport (Haneda) after crashing with a Coast Guard plane on quake-aid duties. Fortunately everyone escaped from the passenger plane, but there were deaths on the Coast Guard plane.

Singapore released its 'flash' Q4 GDP result overnight. That is fast - we have to wait until mid-March for ours. The Singaporeans have current data for their policy makers to absorb and respond to already. They report the city-state's GDP grew by +2.8% in Q4, accelerating from a marginally revised +1.0% in Q3. This was their 12th straight quarter of economic expansion and the strongest pace since Q3 2022. The service sector contributed most to this recovery, modest by their usual standards. In the 20 years to 2018 it averaged +5%.

A new analysis for 2024 shows that compared to 2022, investments by sovereign wealth funds fell -20% to US$125 bln in 324 transactions; while investments by Public Pension Funds fell -26% to US$ 80 bln in 268 deals. Of the sovereign wealth fund investing, about a quarter can be accounted for by activity by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund. Sovereign wealth funds had a tough year - in fact in the six months through October our own NZ Super Fund has posted negative returns in four of the last six months, and in six of the past twelve months.

One reason for poor performance generally might be exposures to commercial real estate. In the US, of the 605 buildings with mortgages expiring soon, there are 224 that Moody’s Analytics estimates owners will have trouble refinancing this year, either because the properties carry too much debt or because their rental performance is poor. There are now roughly US $800 bln in American commercial mortgage-backed securities and delinquencies on office loans financed by them topped 6% at the end of November, up from 1.7% a year earlier. The expectation is that a lot of pain and write-downs will happen in 2024 and the pattern will be repeated worldwide, made worse because most of the "long term funding" that expires this year was on interest-only terms.

Shipping giant Maersk has backtracked from its reuse of the Suez Canal and Red Sea routes, putting that normalisation of hold after an escalation of attacks.

The UST 10yr yield starts the year higher than where we left it on New Year's Eve, now at 3.95% and up +7 bps. The key 2-10 yield curve is still inverted by -38 bps. Their 1-5 curve inversion is a little less inverted, now by -89 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion is also less inverted at -144 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 4.02% and +6 bp higher. The China 10 year bond rate is now at 2.60% and little-changed. And the NZ Government 10 year bond rate is also little-changed at 4.43%.

Wall Street has started its 2024 session down -0.8% in Tuesday trade on the S&P500. The Nasdaq is down -1.8%. Overnight European markets opened their 2024 account with very small changes. Yesterday Tokyo did not trade as it is a standard holiday there yesterday and today. Hong Kong did however and fell a sharp -1.5%. Shanghai had their own -0.4% retreat. On the other hand, the ASX200 rose +0.5% in its first 2024 trading session. The NZX50 was closed of course.

Investors appear convinced that major Western central banks are close to a general policy shift from raising interest rates to cutting them. But as day one trading suggests, there is nervousness because economies have not really adjusted yet to a world where money is not cheap. After big rallies in 2023 it is hard to see similar gains in 2024.

The price of gold will start today unchanged from New Year's Eve at just over US$2062/oz.

Oil prices are -US$1 lower at just over US$70.50/bbl in the US. The international Brent price is now just over US$76/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar starts today at 62.5 USc and down almost -1c from where we left it on New Year's Eve. Against the Aussie we are nearly -½c softer at 92.4 AUc to start the year. Against the euro we are marginally softer at 57.1 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 70.6 and down -50 bps.

The bitcoin price starts today much higher at US$45,095 and up a sharp +7.9% from where we left it prior to the New Year. This 2024 level is higher than at any time in 2023. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been high at just under +/- 3.3%. ETF buying activity is said to be behind the rise today.

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49 Comments

It would be nice if people provided a bit of context with opaque links so we knew what we were clicking on...

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Its a surprise ...(aimed at boomers if that helps)

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Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo - so said H. G. Wells.

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I hope you get over it soon then

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Like doggy doo on the front lawn when you dont own a dog

I predict bitcoin (and crypto) will be the story of 2024  

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Surely that turd is well and truly polished by now

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"The fourth quarter has seen factories reduce employment at a pace not seen since 2009 barring only the early pandemic lockdown months" - PMI  Link

What really happened in 2008? (It was NOT a financial crisis)

What's the difference between financial and monetary crisis? Everything. Whether anyone knows it or not, we continue to live in the long shadows of 2008. They are deflationary more than anything, too, a Silent Depression that so long as we remain stuck in it will make the 2020s into something more like the 2010s. That's not good. Getting out starts with finally a proper accounting of 15 years ago. Video link

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our own NZ Super Fund has posted negative returns in four of the last six months, and in six of the past twelve months.

Another source of tax revenue that looks at risk for Nicola. 

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Its a thankless job being finance minister following the profligate Ardern years.

Billy English left them with a great set of books they could have used well. 

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I wonder how Bill would have handled Covid...??

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You will never know, ardern gets the bouquet for the beginning as well as the brick bat for how it ended.

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True a beginning but barely actioned in time and only then after some very serious intervention from senior health practitioners, academics and authorities. 

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What "serious intervention" do you refer to?  Are these senior health practitioners, academics and authorities responsible for "serious intervention" that resulted in the abhorrent lockdowns and loss of liberties that everyone goes on about?   

Maybe these experts were called on to provide input from start to finish, including when to action in the beginning, and we can thank them for providing guidance to the Government and our great C19 outcomes?  

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The question of mandatory quarantine was, according to the NZH 7 April 2020, urged for example  by Professor David Skeggs at which point the government was still mulling it over. That then moved relatively rapidly to a border closure. I would view that as the beginning as noted above with the associated input from the health  professionals as mentioned.

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So it was the health professionals that made strong recommendations to close the borders and introduce mandatory quarantining?  Which then led to citizens not being able to return to their country due to inadequate quarantine facility capacities?  Something that you can't just magic up in a matter of a few days.  

I assume you're all for the govt breaching citizen's rights to return home, on the basis that health professionals "strong armed" the govt into doing this?  

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My comment was that in my view the beginning was the border closure which came after input from health professionals as has been reported. What ever you want to assume and/or speculate about events and developments after that, is of course entirely up to you.

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Oh man nzdan. The bits I remember were that the nz govt required travellers to mask up and the tourists laughed that no one would catch them.

Thats not nearly as bad as the businessmen who got together off their own initiative at the start of covid and led a delegation to save the govt bacon for stocks of inadequate medical supplies.

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I don't recall tourists laughing, do you have an article handy?  I recall (anecdotally) citizens throwing tantys about wearing masks.  Conveniently taking drinks/food on public transport so they can wear their masks on their chin while consuming (loophole), only it'd take 3x as long to finish their coffee and they'd not mask up between tiny sips. 

Not entirely sure of the relevance to my comment?  Do you think Cindy was personally responsible for ordering the medical supplies?  Or would that be the MOH, one of the aforementioned "authorities" responsible for health that we never actually elect.  

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I saw it on the network news with the actual reactions. Google it. There is an rnz article from 18 march 2020 about 10 days before LD threatening hardline approach. That's typical tactic with little follow up

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This article.  I'll have to take your word for it on the couple of tourists laughing about it, but they were probably equally in fits over shitting in a bush next to Lake Taupo.  

https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/checkpoint/audio/2018739067/i…

I also Googled other countries .

Closer to home again:

 

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But Covid has not ended, it's still everywhere!

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by  Stephen Hulme  |  14th Oct 14, 8:27pm  - Link

Given that SCF owner Allan Hubbard died before the trial got underway and that he was central to the way SCF was managed, it was always going to be tricky for the SFO.

 The as yet unchallenged artifice that taxpayers should regret most was National's decision to extend the SCF government deposit guarantee scheme.

 Only to be challenged by this nonsense;

 A carve-up of the housing portfolio in the new Cabinet has alerted the country to a radical reform the Government has in mind for state housing. If all goes to plan, the state will no longer own all, or possibly any, of the houses given to tenants at income-related rents. They will be owned and run by charities, voluntary organisations, iwi and other groups that meet standards to be set. It will be called "social housing". Read more here and here

 NZ voters may wonder if they have been misled as might those in the UK when they read these headline making comments:

 Starting this Wednesday, 4,000 men (and, yes, they’ll mainly be men) will gather in a giant hall in London. Among them will be major property developers, billionaire investors and officials of your local council or one nearby. And what they’ll discuss will be the sale of public real estate, prime land already owned by you and me, to the private sector. The marketing people brand this a property trade show, but let’s drop the euphemisms and call it the sales fair to flog off Britain.

 For the past 25 years, this conference – Mipim for short – has been held in Cannes. It’s a jaunt so lavish as to be almost comic – where big money developers invite town hall executives for secret discussions aboard private yachts, and whose regulars boast that they get through more champagne than all the liggers at the film festival.

 Suitably oiled-up, local officials open talks with multinational developers to sell council housing estates and other sites. All this networking is so lucrative for the builders that they even fly over council staff. Last year, Australia’s Lend Lease paid for Southwark’s boss, Peter John, to attend Cannes. This is the same Lend Lease to which Southwark sold the giant Heygate estate at a knockdown price: 1,100 council flats in inner London to be demolished and replaced with 2,500 units, of which only 79 will be for “social rent”. Read more

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Queue KO review, led by whom?

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Bill left us with a massive infrastructure deficit. Kind of like saving money by not painting your house; it may seem like a good idea until you have to replace all the rotten weatherboards 

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People discuss the governments finances as though it were a like a very large household which has to find the money before it can spend but in reality it is in no way like that as it finances it's own spending as the issuer and only source of our NZ Dollar Currency. 

The Reserve Bank shows here that the government never spends money obtained from taxpayers or bondholders but only money created by itself. https://www.rbnz.govt.nz/-/media/518b0156a77949d08cfee13723f98974.ashx

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A thankless job when you promised it would be easy and find out it’s actually hard.

When Robertson was in - “Why is he spending so much money?”

Willis - “Why are there so many cost pressures?”

I’ve got news for National - we have an aging population - health and nz super are going through the roof and we have a $100B infrastructure deficit - cost pressures is a bipartisan issue and tax cuts for rich landlords are unaffordable.

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Guaranteed NZ super will increase at least another $1b this year, like it has every year as far back as 2014.  Nobody batts an eyelid at that, yet shrieks at $120m p.a. for ECE pay parity (0.6% of the current $18b p.a. NZ super costs), or if half price public transport was introduced permanently @ $250m per year (1.4% of super costs).  

B-b-b-b-but 50 years ago a now dead PM made a promise or something....

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Vote as many will and have, however the costs will keep adding up and up until govt and treasury are forced to do something drastic once the immigration spike blows through and the money has to come from somewhere, or the system will have to be rejigged.

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Phase out National Super and phase in a muscular KiwiSaver.  Universal.

That will take thirty years to come on stream, so challenging for those who think in one year term only.

Think of the trickle of New Zealand based capital that becomes a roar. 

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That means one generation will pay for both their own retirement as well as the next generation’s retirement. 
At least raise the retirement age (starting now, + one month per year), and then tie it to life expectancy. Make KiwiSaver available at 65 so you can save to retire earlier. 

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Red Sea a choke point now and escalating towards a serious flashpoint come incident such as the downing of an Iranian jetliner in 1988 by a USN destroyer. Likely some sort of UN sanctioned flotilla will need to be stationed in the confines and approaches otherwise the attacks will soon be more sophisticated than just drones and speedboats.

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Will Iran really want an escalation at this time - their leadership of ancient and incompetent mullahs are struggling to deal with internal issues and are not urging their proxies on this time around - maybe they finally understand that support from within other Arab countries for further war and bloodshed is low

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Over 60% of Chinese European trade utilises the Suez Canal. Perhaps their pals in Tehran are having this pointed out to them as well?

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That's right Foxglove and I always wonder why, in these situations, the US don't invite China to help police or at least contribute in some way.

It is after all a World problem.

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The UN does not have any naval capability by its self to do this as far as I know and the only countries that would participate already are trying and have so far failed. At the moment the US has decided not to escalate.

the attacks will soon be more sophisticated than just drones and speedboats.

The news here is very censored but my understanding Ansar Allah (The Houthies) have anti-ship ballistic missiles that the US cannot reliably intercept (they intercepted 2 out of how many?). Read between the lines on the UKMTO paragraph. If they can hit container ships they can hit destroyers and carriers.

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In modern times aircraft carriers are coffin ships.  One missilr out of nowhere and 4000 Americans are toast.

Then 100,000 die in the blowback.

All quite mad really

 

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This is Yemen though. Russia and China and their richest export customers should be able to sink carriers but Yemen should still be weak enough for the US to carpet bomb.

All of a sudden Gaza can make tandem HEAT RPG munitions in the garage and Yemen was the first country in the world to fire an ASBM in anger and the US and co is too lethargic to have an answer.

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Happy New Year everyone, surround yourself with good people, life is too short to be dragged down by miserable people. 

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Busty babes too Yvil 

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Saudi Arabia has officially joined BRICS as a full-fledged member. Happy days. I guess. 

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/saudi-state-tv-says-kingdom-o…

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Argentina has pulled out ..has other plans..

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I cannot imagine what they intend to do. 

Saudi Arabia is going to be crucial to the BRICs member states.  

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The Middle East shifting away from the USA is very interesting, especially in light of the war Israel is waging on Arab people.

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US interest expense rates hit USD$1.1 trillion - $250 billion more than the Defense Budget; USD250 billion more than spending on Medicare, USD200 billion more than spending on health. It will also surpass the USD1.35 trillion spending on Social Security this year.

Probably nothing. It all balances on the ledger.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-debt-hits-record-34001-trillion

 

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Yes apparently because they owe it to themselves its not a problem?

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To some extent, yes. The argument that Japan owes debt to themselves is more relevant. Japan is not hocking off its debt to the rest of the word. 

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Government debt should only be used for infrastructure and investment. Using debt to pay the bills is just a way to rob future generations. 

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