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China's factories shows varied signs, services expand; Indian strength continues; US factory indications also varied; EU labour market resilient; UST 10yr 4.19%; gold and oil firm; NZ$1 = 61 USc; TWI-5 = 70.4

Economy / news
China's factories shows varied signs, services expand; Indian strength continues; US factory indications also varied; EU labour market resilient; UST 10yr 4.19%; gold and oil firm; NZ$1 = 61 USc; TWI-5 = 70.4

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand, with news the world's factories are signaling quite varied status indications. But overall February saw global manufacturing show signs of renewed vigour. Output expanded for the second successive month, supported by the first increase in new order intakes since June 2022. The outlook remained broadly positive overall, with optimism regarding the year ahead staying close to January's nine-month high.

But first this week, all eyes will be on the US non-farm payrolls report but not until Saturday NZT. Markets currently expect it to expand by another +200,000. Prior to this other American labour market indicators will be release like the JOLTS report and the layoff survey. The US will also deliver factory order data and Fed speakers will be out in force while the Fed itself reports to Congress on monetary policy.

Separately the Bank of Canada and the ECB will deliver rate reviews. Others will report trade, inflation and PMI data. Locally there is not much big data released although the Tuesday release of 2023 household expenditure survey results will be interesting, both for what they say, and what they don't.

In China there were two PMI surveys out. The official factor one wasn't very optimistic but the private Caixin version reports improving and expanding factory conditions. It is more understandable in China why the two might vary. The official one focuses on large state organisations, the Caixin one more on private businesses. Still, the results are opposite to what you might have expected. The official version also covered their services sector and that part reported an improving expansion.

In China, it now seems it is news that a large property developer actually is able to make payments on their bonds. Also in their news is that you can get arrested for asking local government authorities to pay their debts.

It will be no surprise, the Indian PMI rose in February, complementing its economic expansion.

But the Japanese PMI reported 'deteriorating' factory conditions.

After a sharp +18% jump in January, South Korean exports were expected to rise only modestly (less than +2%) in February on that same basis. But they rose almost +5% on the year-on-year basis pointing to resilience in export demand for them. Much lower imports (due to lower oil prices) enabled them to book a sharp rise in their trade surplus.

With an unexpected fall in new order levels, the widely watched American ISM PMI dipped deeper in contraction in February. The companion internationally benchmarked Markit PMI (now called the S&P Global PMI) told a very different story however in the same market, swinging up sharply to an expansion, and one this survey hasn't had since mid-2022. The driver? Well, it was a surge in new orders. The two surveys could not have been more different this month, an unusual set of views.

The widely-watched University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey for February is clearly upbeat however. Although consumer sentiment moved sideways in the month, slipping just two index points below January, it is holding the gains seen over the past three months. Expected business conditions remained substantially higher than six months ago. And long run expectations are much higher too.

EU (Euro Area) inflation fell in February but not by as much as expected. It is now at 2.6% pa on falling energy costs. Like everyone, they are finding the "last mile" hard to achieve. Meanwhile the Euro Area jobless rate fell to a record low 6.2%. But these days, governments get little credit for keeping employment high even when economic activity wavers. But in the sweep of economic history, it is a remarkable factor.

However, the Eurozone PMI does not make for happy reading.

The UST 10yr yield starts today at 4.19% and up a marginal +1 bp from Saturday but down -6 bps from a week ago. In fact that is near a three week low. The key 2-10 yield curve inversion is still at -35 bps. But their 1-5 curve inversion is still at -79 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve inversion also still at -121 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield is now at 4.12% and up +1 bp. The China 10 year bond rate is now 2.39%, and just off its all-time low. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is down a mere -1 bp at 4.81% and down -10 bps from a week ago.

The price of gold will start today at Saturday's higher level of US$2082/oz. And that is also up from US$2038/oz a week ago.

Oil prices are little-changed at just over US$79.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just under US$83.50/bbl. Both are +US$3 higher than a week ago. In a bid to try and raise the price, OPEC has extended its production cuts.

The Kiwi dollar starts today at just on 61 USc and little-changed from this time Saturday. But that is -1c lower than this time last week. Against the Aussie we are holding at 93.6 AUc. Against the euro we have firmed slightly to 56.4 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 70.4 and little-changed from Saturday, but down about -100 bps in a week.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$62,810 and up +1.3% from this time yesterday. But it is up more than +US$10,000 in a week or +25%. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at +/- 1.2%.

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12 Comments

https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/sunday/audio/2018928484/timot…

https://www.resilience.org/stories/2024-03-01/envisioning-a-steady-stat…

Mora fails to ask the prime media question: Why?

And the other one assumes continuity of a lot of complexity. 

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India’s GDP growth masks economic challenges

India's economy grew substantially in 2023, with estimates showing a 7.3 per cent expansion due to high levels of capital formation. Yet, private sector response was disappointing and disinvestment increased almost 29 per cent. To sustain economic growth, the forthcoming Indian government must tackle rising inflation, economic challenges, such as the slowing growth of the agriculture and allied sectors, a drop in foreign direct investment and a lower trade account.

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That's a bit of a silly quote - of course they do. 

The question is: Why is the lid coming down? Sa me question applies globally. And that is where the Mora/Heath interview comes in...

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The slowing growth of agriculture and allied sectors (dah) is a political problem not an economic one.  Just as it has in every country that is developing the migration from farm to city continues.  India, like France, has an easy trip to improved agriculture performance, India has plenty of arable land (the whole spectrum actually) through intensification and for them (a non-beef producer) GMO will be a must.

A drop in foreign direct investment may relate to infrastructure and of course ROI versus other investments at the moment.  (Graft while still a problem is probable not a factor in scaled investment).

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The Casino Crowd Is Back Across Markets With Soft Echoes of 2021

(Bloomberg) -- Three years since speculative fever engulfed the US investment landscape, thrill seeking is back in vogue — even before Jerome Powell & Co. take their foot off the monetary brake.

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Interesting, the tension between inflation killing US Debt due to interest payments and it devaluing that debt is critical I would say.  A collapse of the market would be damaging for more reasons but neutral on US Debt.

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China is pumping, I cannot be the only one buying just about anything that will fit in an envelope to a small box from them online. AliExpress has single handidly saved NZ Post, their courier drivers are flat out delivering in NZ, the service is now so efficient that they convert to an NZ Post tracking number when it lands. How you can get your whole order delivered for less than just the same courier service in the North Island is beyond me. Freight free out of China to your door, $11 to send something here. NZ retail stores are going to be in serious trouble as the next generation go all online.

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Frankly the lower quality we have become used to and expect from China is more than made up for in their basement bargain prices. 

I'm literally paying <1/4 the price for a good that might have 70% the longevity of the NZ equivalent, and as you say free shipping.

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Depends on what it is you are buying, if its made in China anyway like everything these days is anyway the quality is the same as in stores. If you tried in years ago and had a bad experience and have never tried it again since, I suggest its worth another try because its all changed.

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Out of curiosity what are the delivery times from when you pay until when you receive the goods?

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This used to be a huge problem with 4 to 6 weeks delivery but nowadays the delivery is as little as 6 days. Sometimes the seller can be slow if they are not the ones holding the stock but typically they ship within hours. AliExpress Shipping is the way to go even if it cost a couple of buck extra but in many cases now if you order over a certain dollar amount shipping is free.

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