Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news the US Fed thinks inflation risks outweigh concerns about their labour market.
But first, in its familiar yoyo pattern, US mortgage applications fell last week by -1.4% from the prior week, but that makes then +10% higher than the same week a year ago. The softness over the past week is all related to softer refinance activity, even though benchmark 30 year mortgage rates changed little.
The US Fed released the minutes of its July meeting and that revealed the stances of the two Trump supporters on the nine-member voting panel. "Almost all" officials supported keeping rates unchanged at 4.25%, with those two dissenting in favour of a quarter-point cut to protect a weakening job market. It seems ironic that they should use that reason, because Trump fired the BLS chief for producing results that showed the American labour market weakening. One of the two, Christopher Waller, is considered the front-runner to replace Powell when his term ends. The two dissenters seem isolated in the group at this time.
But that has not stopped Trump supporters making up 'fraud' claims against sitting Fed members in an effort to twist the voting panel.
These minutes had no impact on financial markets.
There was a well-supported US Treasury 20 year bond tender earlier today that delivered a median yield of 4.82%. That was lower than the 4.89% at the prior equivalent event a month ago.
In Canada, a survey of small business owners turned more positive in July - even though their trade association claimed that 38% of them won't last a year without tariff changes.
Across the Pacific, Taiwan turned in another very strong rise in export orders, up +15% in July from a year ago. After the +25% rise in June, this remains impressive but is what analysts have now come to expect.
In Indonesia, they had a central bank review of their 5.25% policy interest rate yesterday and no change was anticipated. But in fact they cut by -25 bps to 5.00%, the fifth cut over the past year. They are confident inflation will remain contained and are moving to support "the need to stimulate economic growth in line with the economy's capacity".
In the UK, their CPI inflation rate rose to 3.8% in July, its highest since January 2024. Driving the rise were cost increases from transport, holidays, food and fuel. These were offset by slower increases in rents (even if they are still rising fast). They have their own twist on the CPI called the CPIH which they emphasise, which adds in owner-occupier housing costs, and that rose 4.2%. That draws in imputed rents, stamp duties, and the cost of maintenance improvements. Either way, they have a sharpish inflation problem.
In Australia, AUSTRAC said real estate agents are one of the key to tackling scams, drug trafficking and organised crime. Along with banks and lawyers, real estate agents are going to get more focus on fighting money laundering.
The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.29%, down -1 bp from yesterday at this time. The key 2-10 yield curve is still at +55 bps. Their 1-5 curve is still inverted by -11 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is now inverted by -6 bps. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.28% and down -4 bps bps from yesterday. The China 10 year bond rate is up +2 bps at 1.79%. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate starts today at just under 4.42% and down a sharp -11 bps.
Wall Street has eased again today with the S&P500 down -0.2% in Wednesday trade. Overnight, European markets were very mixed between London's +1.1% gain and Frankfurt's -0.6% retreat. Tokyo ended its Wednesday session down -1.5%. Hong Kong was up +0.2% while Shanghai was up a full +1.0%. Singapore was steady, up +0.1%. The ASX200 rose +0.2%, while the NZX50 had a good day, up +1.1% in Wednesday trade.
The price of gold will start today at US$3,347/oz, up +US$31 from yesterday.
American oil prices have stabilised at just over US$62.50/bbl with the international Brent price up +US$1 to just over US$66.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar is at just on 58.3 USc and down -70 bps from yesterday following the dovish RBNZ MPS. Against the Aussie we have fallen -80 bps to 90.6 AUc. Against the euro we are down -60 bps at 50 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just under 66.1, and down -80 bps.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$114,270 and up +0.7% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low at just under +/-0.8%.
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9 Comments
Next up on the "be careful whose horse you hitch to" game show is Target, whose sales and values have plunged recently. Per the WSJ, Target tends to have a more progressive customer base (relative to Wal-Mart for example) and the sudden and compete walk-down on DEI policies are reported to have led to something of a revolt among previously loyal customers. CEO has now been fired. Long live the new CEO.
Once US retailers get the judders they often head downhill. In this field KMart is an example. Sam’s big outfit though barges on, nothing else really like it.
First time I've ever seen 'walk down" used in the wild. Thanks for the vocab expander
The entire model of the US economy is collapsing. The ruling oligarchs want to get richer and they aren't especially happy with the lower classes having any real wealth. But it is that wealth that enables them to spend and make the oligarchs richer. Making the people poorer means they won't even be able to pick up more debt, although there will be a few who will try, which means the oligarchs income stream will dry up. The mega stores are going to increasingly struggle.
the level of stupidity evident in the US, but is also visible in NZ and other western countries that fails to understand that for any economy to 'work', people must have surplus funds to spend at all levels of the economy. If they don't they will become increasingly unhappy with all sorts of negative consequences and costs for societies and the government. The old cycle is returning "Can you hear the people sing....."
The US oligarchy control global multinationals. They don't really care if an American serf is richer or poorer, because they're clipping the ticket on the expenses of billions.
Similar goes here, to a smaller extent. The NZ consumer is only a minor player to our larger corporates
Too true.
I'd love a consumer revolution against these guys. We'd have to get a lot smarter first.
Might happen via tapped-out debt mechanisms - interest-free beyond the life of the product is a hard sell...
If in any doubt
You are the Product
They sell you things, services, insurances, charge you rates and tax you.
All all turns south once the population collapses, its no wonder that Elon is raising the alarm bells about collapsing working age people.
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