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US PPI up much less than expected; US mortgage applications jump; Japanese exporters bullish; China deflation worse; global growth improves but US a laggard; UST 10yr at 4.03%; gold at another ATH, oil firm; NZ$1 = 59.5 USc; TWI-5 = 66.8

Economy / news
US PPI up much less than expected; US mortgage applications jump; Japanese exporters bullish; China deflation worse; global growth improves but US a laggard; UST 10yr at 4.03%; gold at another ATH, oil firm; NZ$1 = 59.5 USc; TWI-5 = 66.8

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news all eyes are now on tomorrow's US CPI release for August.

But first, there was surprising news from the US. August producer prices rose far less than any analyst had forecast. In fact they fell -0.1% in August from July, following a downwardly revised +0.7% gain in July, driven by a sharp decline in margins for machinery and vehicle wholesaling as importers absorbed some of the tariff taxes. On an annual basis, headline producer inflation slowed to 2.6%, while core producer inflation eased to 2.8%. Analysts had expected the year-on-year change to be up +3.5%.

Markets took these changes at face value, ignoring the "new management" at the agency compiling the data. It is being seen as "Fed-friendly" for a rate cut next week. Although to be fair far more will depend on tomorrow's CPI release where rates closer to 3% are anticipated.

Also unusually positive was last week's data on US mortgage applications. They jumped +9.2% from the prior week to be +11.6% higher than year-ago levels. Driving the turnaround was a -15 bps plunge in benchmark mortgage rates, which fell to their lowest in nearly one year as a wave of pessimistic labour market data drove yields on long-dated Treasury securities to retreat. Applications for a loan to refinance a current mortgage, which are more sensitive to changes in interest rates, surged by +12.2% from the previous week to their highest level in one year. In turn, applications for a mortgage to purchase a new home rose by +6.6%.

And there was another US Treasury 10 year bond auction earlier today and that resulted in a median yield of 3.99%, down from 4.20% at the prior equivalent event a month ago. But a feature of this latest event was the declining demand, down -8.5% which is a notable pullback.

Across the Pacific, Japanese manufacturers are feeling bullish, especially about export prospects. The Reuters Tankan index rose to a very positive level in September, its highest level since April 2022. Easing trade uncertainties following the Japanese-US tariff deal that sharply eased the tariff rate is behind the shift. Sentiment improved across six of nine manufacturing industries surveyed.

In China, they reported that consumer prices dropped -0.4% in August from a year ago, after being unchanged in the prior month and missing market expectations of a -0.2% decline. It was the fifth episode of consumer deflation this year and the sharpest drop since February. China had a similar period of deflation in the second half of 2023, but escaped those pressures in 2024. But they are back again. Food prices fell -1.2%, but beef prices were down -4.3% and lamb prices down -3.6% on that annual basis. Milk prices fell -1.4%.

Meanwhile Chinese producer prices dropped -2.9% in the year to August, less than the -3.6% drop in July, which was the steepest decline since July 2023. Producer prices have now deflated for 35 consecutive month although the latest data is the smallest decline since April.

Despite growing civil unrest and street demonstrations in Jakarta, Indonesian consumer sentiment was little-changed in August, although it is maintaining its recent low that started in May. However in a longer term perspective, it is +20% higher than it was a decade ago. (The last thing Canberra want to see is an unstable Indonesia as a neighbour.)

Fitch Ratings has raised its world growth forecasts for 2025 moderately since the June Global Economic Outlook on better-than-expected incoming data for 2Q-2025. But there is now evidence of an underlying US slowdown in ‘hard’ economic data and positive surprises on eurozone growth have partly reflected US tariff front-running, they say. Fitch still expects world GDP to slow significantly this year.

Global growth is now forecast to be 2.4% in 2025, up 0.2pp since June but a sizeable slowdown from 2.9% last year and below trend. China’s forecast has been raised to 4.7% from 4.2%, the Eurozone’s to 1.1% from 0.8% and the US’s to 1.6% from 1.5%. World growth for 2026 is 0.1pp higher at 2.3%.

The UST 10yr yield is now over 4.03%, down -4 bps from yesterday at this time. The key 2-10 yield curve is flatter at +49 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now inverted by -9 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is now inverted -11 bps. The China 10 year bond rate is up +2 bps at 1.81%. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.24% and down -6 bps from yesterday. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate starts today at just on 4.36%, up +2 bps from yesterday.

Wall Street is firmer again with the S&P500 up +0.3%. Overnight, European markets closed mixed between +0.2% in Paris and -0.4% in Frankfurt. Yesterday Tokyo rose +0.9%, Hong Kong was up +1.0%, but Shanghai only rose +0.1%. Singapore closed up +1.1%. The ASX200 ended its Wednesday session up +0.3%. And the NZX50 rose +0.2% on the day.

The price of gold will start today at a new high at US$3,645/oz, up +US$4 from yesterday.

American oil prices are up +US$1 at just over US$63.50/bbl with the international Brent price is similarly higher at just on US$67.50/bbl. American crude oil stocks jumped, and for a second week in a row, when declines were anticipated, indicating weaker demand than expected.

The Kiwi dollar is now at just over 59.5 USc and up +20 bps from yesterday. Against the Aussie we are down -20 bps at 89.8 AUc. Against the euro we are up +20 bps at 50.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just over 66.8, down -20 bps from yesterday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$113,721 and up +2.4% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been moderate, also at just over +/- 1.4%.

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25 Comments

19 Russian drones shot down in Poland overnight, properties damaged, with drones several hundred km from the border. Together with the attempt to form a cassus belli against Finland over the last couple of weeks and various other provocations, are our resident Russia apologists still feeling relaxed about the situation? Here's Donald Tusk's take: 

"I have no reason to claim we're on the brink of war, but a line has been crossed, and it's incomparably more dangerous than before"

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There now has to be a reaction beyond words and sanction threats. All Russia recognises and respects is force and until they actually meet some on the field, with real offensive capability, they will have no inclination to stop and think. If Nth Korea can put boots on the ground for Russia then so too, on the Ukrainian side, can Poland, the Baltic States and Finland, even Romania. Heck they all know what life was like under Stalin & Co.

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And then there is Finland, which may have cause to regret joining NATO after seven decades of careful neutrality:
https://understandingwar.org/research/russia-ukraine/russian-offensive-…

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Yeah what is it with these states with recent memories of Soviet oppression and assorted Russian invasions wanting to join a defensive alliance? What a terrible provocation to the gentle bear next door. 

This is all part of the pattern of behaviour with Russia trying to reclaim areas that were once 'theirs'. 

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Finland in 1939 finally surrendered to Soviet forces at which point about 10% of territory was ceded. What lay at the heart of the conflict was Stalin’s concern to the security of Leningrad, he wanted a mutually determined demilitarised zone to keep the city out of artillery range. The Finns suspected it to be more than that, resisted and hence the so called Winter War. Finland then sided with Nazi Germany when it invaded Russia and put troops into the conflict. Consequently it has always been a rather strange question as to why Stalin, after 1945,  didn’t insist on taking over all of Finland. 

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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/sep/10/drones-poland-post-alaska…

This is bad, Poland is itching to kill Russians.

and

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/sep/10/russia-putin-prov…

add all this to the memo sent to French hospitals about preparing for major military casualties , its all not good.

I can see major sanctions next 14 days on Russia and possibly India for buying Russian oil.

 

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Comes a few days after that nonsense about Putin wanting to annex Europe. 

Weapons of mass destruction come to mind. 

Wouldn't be the first own-goal contrived to provocate (sometimes called false-flag). 

Not saying it is - but open minds tend to do better than pre-assuming ones...

 

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Would you open your mind to the idea that Putin wants to recover all land that was once Russia's, or the USSR's? It doesn't take much of a leap of imagination - just listening to Putin's words:

“Peter the Great waged the great northern war for 21 years. It would seem that he was at war with Sweden, he took something from them. He did not take anything from them, he returned [what was Russia’s],”

“Apparently, it is also our lot to return [what is Russia’s] and strengthen [the country]. And if we proceed from the fact that these basic values form the basis of our existence, we will certainly succeed in solving the tasks that we face.”

The idea of Putin wanting to annex Europe is a straw man - his ambitions are not that great, but if they continue are very likely to lead to war with Europe. 

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Who said he wanted to annex Europe PDK? You're being an extremist. In the first instance Putin has already identified that he wants to recreate Imperial Russia, but that clearly incudes having control of the former Soviet states, which by the way were not part of imperial Russia.

But why stop there? Can you provide any assurance that he would? Why would you trust anything he has stated, considering most of it is already proven to be lies?

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That'll be why Europe/Nato is hurriedly spending up large on 'defense'. 

Because there is no need...

Hang on... 

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You're not quite getting the logic here. Europe and NATO are spending up large because Putin wants to reclaim the Eastern European regions that were previously under Russian control. Many of those regions are in the EU and/or NATO and want to stay in/join them. Russia is a proven aggressor and now the allegiance of the USA as a protector cannot be taken for granted, so the rest of Europe has to step up. 

This doesn't imply that Putin wants to annex the whole of Europe, and I think it would be extremely depressing if Western Europe said Putin can take whatever he wants, just because they aren't on the menu themselves. I support European Unity in the face of this Imperial aggression. 

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"Because there is no need" That is rank denial of the obvious PDK and if that is your view then every other argument you have presented here comes into question. 

What is going on in Ukraine is not about the Nuland's, it is not about NATO, it is not about Trump or Europe. It is solely about Putin's delusions of grandeur, his desire for some form of immortality (only just revealed, but notoriety first) and it is not about Nazis. 

What he's achieved is bringing NATO closer to his borders (they were already there - Poland), and extended NATO's borders on Russia because Finland and Sweden are now NATO too, but until he invaded Ukraine they were staunchly independent, and he's woken Europe up to the fact that the Russian threat has not gone away.

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And let's not forget Isreal who seem to think they have an open license to attack any country they feel like. Sheer arrogance. 

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More evidence out this morning that not all is well in consumer land. If we don't see a 50 point cut at the next OCR review we're truly at the mercy of muppets.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/572699/never-a-tougher-time-for-bus…

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You have a very good point about a 50. If it's needed like they have demonstrated in the last MPS, then why not get it there right? Certainly Adrian would have done so.

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Charlie kirk, a significant MAGA supporter and very clever debater has been murdered during a debate at a university in Utah. 

The old question arises, will the establishment, particularly the Republicans really ask why beyond the superficial BS, and start to realise just how much they are becoming hated? 

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That’s an interesting rhetorical sleight of hand.
You’re shifting responsibility from the shooter onto Republicans before we even know who the shooter is or what their motives were.

And speaking of Republican “superficial BS” here’s a take from the lefty press:

“We don’t know if this was a supporter shooting their gun off in celebration”

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There's clearly crazies on both sides. Maybe they should try to keep guns out of the hands of the crazies, regardless of alignment?

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When did freedom of speech become "superficial BS"?

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/572727/live-us-conservative-commentato…

 

Another country's establishment can't handle dissent

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm2z30p033ro

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The enquiries coming out of the US about a lot of things don't look past the event occurrences and what drove them in most instances. Kirk was getting called out more and more by the conservatives for the MAGA rubbish he pushed out. He was very clever at couching his views in ways that deflected and diverted. But he was a big symbol of MAGA and because of the work he was doing, reachable. Asking why he was shot beyond the "just some left wing nut" or "left wing conspiracy" is needed. It was an extreme act, so why would someone be pushed far enough to want to do that?

 

"he fed listeners an unmediated diet of half-truths and conspiracies, boosting Trump’s “stolen election” claims and riffing on Covid-19 theories that struck a chord with many on the right." https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/who-was-donald-trump-ally-charlie-kirk…

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You mean like asking "why was Hamas pushed to invade Israel on the 7th of October 2024" ?

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Yep. Drill all the way down and get all the truth out. But they won't because the way they treated the Palestinians on the post WW2 years was appalling and set up what is happening now. 

With all the history on the table in depth discussions to a lasting solution might just happen. Buth they won't and don't want them to happen, because Israel will be seen for the problem it is.

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Agreed

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