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Foreign direct investment leaks away from China; Japanese inflation holds high; Taiwanese factories very busy; US on holiday amid new tariff threats; UST 10yr at 4.51%; gold dips and oil holds; NZ$1 = 59.9 USc; TWI-5 = 67.8

Economy / news
Foreign direct investment leaks away from China; Japanese inflation holds high; Taiwanese factories very busy; US on holiday amid new tariff threats; UST 10yr at 4.51%; gold dips and oil holds; NZ$1 = 59.9 USc; TWI-5 = 67.8

Here's our summary of key economic events over the weekend that affect New Zealand, with news we have ended a turbulent week where the USD fell, US Treasury benchmark rates rose, and equities retreated. Gold jumped.

The turbulence will continue into this coming week with the US president lashing out because his signature tariff policies aren't producing the economic growth or reshoring he anticipated and other countries have worked out how to game him. His new lashes are at the EU, and Apple, for not reshoring. Neither seem in awe of his power any more.

But first, the coming week will be dominated by Wednesday's OCR review where a -25 bps rate cut to 3.25% is widely anticipated. Earlier that day there will be a dairy Pulse auction too.

In Australia, they will update their monthly consumer price indicator, also on Wednesday. Elsewhere, South Korea will be reviewing its monetary policy settings this week, and Japan will release important industrial production, retail sales, and consumer sentiment updates.

In the US, after their long weekend, markets are bracing for another uncertain week, driven by those tariff threats from Trump targeting the European Union and Apple. Investors will also focus on commentary from Fed officials, as well as the FOMC meeting minutes. Key US economic indicators include personal income and spending, the PCE price indices, durable goods orders, trade balance, the second estimate of Q1 GDP growth, corporate profits, pending home sales among others.

But first we should note in China, their central bank injected ¥500 bln (NZ$120 bln) of new liquidity into financial institutions through their one-year medium-term lending facility on Friday. But that was less than the ¥600 bln added in April.

China's net foreign direct investment actually fell in April from March, a very unusual shift. The fall wasn't large at -US$4.8 bln for the month but a notable shift from the +US$7.2 bln rise in April 2024 which was considered unusually small. Go back to April 2023 and it was +US$14.1 bln and +US$15.4 bln the year before. In the past two years, the August levels have stalled (but not retreated) and this is the first we have ever seen where there was a net outflow of foreign investment from China in a month. 

And Nikkei is reporting that the protracted real estate woes are pushing down lending rates, and now 80% of Chinese banks have seen their interest margins fall below the industry threshold for profitability, raising concerns over the sector's stability. Fifty-four of 58 commercial banks listed in mainland China and Hong Kong posted reduced interest margins compared with the previous fiscal year, according to the analysis, which evaluated financial results announced for the year ended December 2024.

Japanese inflation is holding high, and came in at 3.6% in April, the same as in March. But that was its lowest since December. Food prices rose the least in four months but were still up +6.5% from a year ago, down from the March +7.4%. This dip came after the government took steps to curb rice prices that have doubled over the past year. High rice prices have cost the government minister 'responsible' for that sector his job last week.

In Singapore, April CPI inflation held art a very low 0.9%, but that belies the monthly fall of -0.3% from March. This is the second month in a row they have had month-on-month deflation. That is largely due to falling costs for clothing, household durables, and entertainment. Food price increases were modest.

Taiwanese retail sales growth was weak again in April. It hasn't really recovered after the unexpectedly large drop in February, bumping along essentially at year-ago levels.

But Taiwanese industrial production is on fire, rising another sharp +22% in April from the same month a year ago. That is the best growth rate on record for them, apart from the distorted pandemic recovery.

Across the Pacific in the US, this is the long Memorial Day holiday weekend, the start of their summer season which won't end until their Labor Day holiday on September 1. (Traditional investors "sold in May, and went away" because volumes lighten and become more volatile over this northern summer period.)

This is also the start of the US summer 'driving season'. American petrol prices are currently averaging US$3.196/US gallon. That is NZ$1.41/L. (A year ago it was +10% higher, equivalent to NZ$1.566/L.)

And it is the start of their barbeque season. But prices are likely to rise further from the already record high levels because the number of cattle on feedlots is down, and the amount of beef stored in freezers is lower too.

But of course, business carries on. There was an unusually large rise in new home sales in the US in April, taking them up to an annualised rate of 743,000, a level they haven't seen since mid 2022. After a string of weak months (and downwardly revised earlier data) builders are now resorting to widespread incentives to move stock, and it seems to have worked in April. Housing starts remained weak, and new building consents are declining still.

In Australia and on their eastern seaboard it has been very wet with widespread flooding. And that is having a substantial impact on rural output. In particular, milk volumes are falling and milk prices are rising fast.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.51%, and down -1 bp from this time Saturday. The key 2-10 yield curve is still at +52 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now inverted at -6 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve now at +22 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.45% and up +6 bps from Saturday. The China 10 year bond rate is down -2 bps at 1.67%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate is still at 4.67% and unchanged but up +6 bps for the week.

The price of gold will start today at US$3,357/oz, and down -US$5 from Saturday. But that makes it +US$170 higher than a week ago, a +5.5% jump.

Oil prices are holding at just on US$61.50/bbl in the US and the international Brent price is still just under US$65/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar is still at 59.9 USc, and unchanged from Saturday at this time. A week ago it was at 58.8 USc so an outsized +110 bps rise since then. Against the Aussie we are holding at just under 92.2 AUc. Against the euro we are unchanged at 52.7 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today still just under 67.8 and unchanged but up +40 bps for the week.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$107,270 and down -2.5% from Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just on +/-1.1%.

Daily exchange rates

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Source: CoinDesk

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5 Comments

"if you adjust for inflation and rising wages, Americans are actually going to spend the least amount filling up this Memorial Day since 2003, excluding COVID."

https://www.gasbuddy.com/newsroom/pressrelease/2025/05/20/1157

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The one's that are left who can afford to fill up that is.

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I watched a video of Pete Buttigieg speaking on the weekend and he encapsulated Trump's biggest problem and frustration. In the speech he identified that a core principle of freedom in America is that Americans kneel to no king. 

That's really gotta rip Trump's knickers!

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Pete Buttigieg a Democrat Presidential wannabee but lost out. Probably trying to lift his profile amongst the Democrats for another try. Not sure if the US is ready for a gay president.

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probably not. I wonder how many of his former Navy colleagues were surprised at his preferences after he came out? Personally I think it is irrelevant if it doesn't affect how you do your job, but some peoples veneer of civilisation is a little thin on that subject. All rooted in BS religious dogma.

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