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America kneecapping itself; Japan machine tool orders impress; ditto Taiwan exports; China reports solid holiday activity; Aussie inflation expectations stay high; UST 10yr at 4.15%; gold and oil down; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI-5 = 65.2

Economy / news
America kneecapping itself; Japan machine tool orders impress; ditto Taiwan exports; China reports solid holiday activity; Aussie inflation expectations stay high; UST 10yr at 4.15%; gold and oil down; NZ$1 = 57.4 USc; TWI-5 = 65.2

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news China's economic activity over their holiday period will be impressing investors, while the US worries about weakening labour markets.

But first, the ongoing US Federal Government shutdown means there is no USDA WASDE report for September that was due today. That will delay scrutiny of "farmageddon" especially for soybean farmers. Bailouts are on the way (in a way Trump hates in other countries) but they won't be large enough to hold off existential issues for many farmers.

But despite the shutdown, there was a long-dated bond auction overnight for their 30 year Treasury bond, and it attracted normal levels of support. It resulted in a median yield of 4.67%, up from 4.58% at the prior equivalent event a month ago.

Across the Pacific, Japanese machine tool orders for September rose almost +10% from a year earlier to its best September level since the record high in 2022. Driving the increase was export orders, although domestic orders gained too. It is an impressive result for them.

Taiwanese exports in September continue to astound. The surged almost +34% from a year ago to more than US$54 bln in the month, their third-highest month ever. Only the prior July and August were larger, so they are on a real roll. This latest data was driven by strong demand for their electronics products, up more than +86% on the same basis. Other machinery exports were good too. You can see why mainland politicians covet their neighbour and want to claim it.

In the Philippines, their central bank cut its policy rate unexpectedly by -25 bps to 4.75%.

China is back from holiday. According to official reports, they estimated the Golden Week holiday generated 888 mln separate travel trips with total overall spending at ¥809 bln (NZ$200 bln). These are record highs with hospitality up +2.7% and tourist spending up +6%. Their overall GST data shows retail activity up +4.5% from year-ago levels for this holiday period. By any measures these are good levels and indicate China's economy is more than holding its own at present. It also indicates that domestic demand can be a sustainable driver for them, much as Beijing has wanted.

Supporting this conclusion has been the positive financial market reactions post-holiday from the equity, bond and currency markets.

Indonesia reported August retail sales overnight and they expanded at a good pace, up +3.5% from a year ago, and while this wasn't as fast as for July, it does indicate that recent government measures to dig them out of a languid period are working. This is important because social unrest spilled into the streets a few months ago.

In Europe, Germany reported August export levels overnight and they came in almost the same as they reported a year ago (€130 bln)

In Australia, their October survey of inflation expectations again shows pressure at the top of the recent range. Those expectations edged up to 4.8% from 4.7% in September, continuing high results since June. This is building concerns that Q3 inflation may exceed the forecasts of 3% when it is released on Wednesday, October 29. This latest uptick reflects the impact of unwinding temporary energy subsidies, and elevated labour costs driven by weak productivity.

Global container freight rates were little-changed last week, down just -1% from the prior week to be under half year-ago levels. Bulk freight rates were also unchanged for the week to be +5% higher than year-ago levels.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.15% and up +1 bp from yesterday at this time. The key 2-10 yield curve is still at +55 bps. Their 1-5 curve is positive by +8 bps. And their 3 mth-10yr curve is now +5 bps positive. The China 10 year bond rate is down -3 bps at 1.85% after returning from holiday. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.37%, up +4 bps from yesterday. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate starts today at just on 4.14%, down -7 bps from yesterday.

Wall Street is down -0.5% on the S&P500 today. European markets were mixed between -0.4% (London) and +0.1% (Frankfurt, and enough to be a new ATH for them). Tokyo ended Thursday trade with another outsized +1.8% rise. Hong Kong was down -0.3% in their Wednesday trade. Shanghai was up +1.3% in post holiday catch-up trade. Singapore ended down -0.4%. The ASX200 ended its Thursday up +0.2%. But the NZX50 was unchanged in its session.

The price of gold will start today at US$3980/oz, down -US$73 from yesterday and now well off its high. Volatility is setting in. Silver is down too but not by as much, now just under US$49/oz. Earlier in the day it hit a new ATH before the pullback.

American oil prices are down -US$1 at just on US$61.50/bbl, with the international Brent price now just under US$65.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar is at just on 57.4 USc, down another -40 bps from yesterday. Against the Aussie we softened -10 bps at 87.7 AUc. Against the euro we are down -10 bps at 49.7 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 65.2, down -20 bps from yesterday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$120,690 and down -2.0% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just on +/- 1.4%.

Daily exchange rates

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Source: CoinDesk

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30 Comments

No bank fixed rates movements yet despite a couple of days since the OCR move of -0.5% when -0.35% was priced in? 

I wonder how many millions they each earn for each day of this game of chicken. Parasites. 

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Up like a rocket, down like a feather 

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Cut a little before the review then claim you’ve already cut recently. 

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Only fools and horses work 

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nay-sayers, then?

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You win the internet today 👍 

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Astounding. 

"“Chinese manufacturers that have the U.S. as their main market must find a way to survive,” Taiwanese businessman Lee Meng-chu told Radio Free Asia, noting the “huge demand” for transit solutions that enable exporters to sell to the U.S. but evade the 145% U.S. tariffs imposed on Chinese imports.

Freight forwarders, or customs brokers, have emerged as key facilitators, managing customs declaration documents, clearance, and certificates of origin, with their service fees set to rise with the spike in demand, said Lee. Some freight forwarders are even helping exporters change or reload containers to disguise origins, he said."

https://www.rfa.org/english/china/2025/05/06/china-tariff-exports-origi…

https://x.com/robin_j_brooks/status/1952748741296902457/photo/1

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I am astounded 

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I'm more perplexed about DCs astoundment.

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Nope. The exporters had a barrier put in front of them. Now they're working on how to defeat it. Human nature. Trump will lose.

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Kiwi Dollar goes down the karzi.......up comes inflation bigly!

Big OCR hikes ahead in 2026. 

NZ Housing Ponzi town cannot catch a break......

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RBNZ could ignore the NZD depreciation as a one off event. 

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The return of looking through...

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China is back from holiday. According to official reports, they estimated the Golden Week holiday generated 888 mln separate travel trips

Lol. I think it's really cute how they go "tell me you cooked up the numbers without telling me you cooked up the numbers"

It looks to me it's so common practice at this point they don't even care it's obvious

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AI bubble anyone?-

Shares in Oracle fell as much as 7 percent on Tueday after The Information reported, citing internal documents, that the tech giant’s cloud computing business was generating lower profit margins than what Wall Street had been expecting.

...equal to 14 cents for every $1 of sales, the documents show. That’s lower than the gross margins of many nontech retail businesses.

Oracle Fears Add to Doubts About the A.I. Rally - The New York Times

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The price of gold will start today at US$3980/oz, down -US$73 from yesterday and now well off its high. Volatility is setting in.

All good things come to an end. But imagine spending 14 hours a day projecting cash flows and learning business fundamentals when you could have just bought a piece of rock instead.

Big fall in the gold miners overnight - almost 5% using GDX as a proxy.   

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I doubt very much we are at the end of golds run if that's what you are suggesting. 

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All I know is that I don't know. TBH, we'd all be better off if Ponzinomics weren't the priority. The gold price is just a reaction to all this.  

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"All good things come to an end."

I'm with Rastus here, I very much doubt that Gold's run is done.  Realistically, it had to have a pullback at some point. That point being $4,000 (profit taking) and also coinciding with some good (temporary ?) news on the end of the war in Gaza, is unsurprising to me.  Then again, I could be wrong, but I'm using this pullback to buy more GDX and Granite, so that's my belief. 

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Sure Dr Y. Do what you gotta do. I have no appetite to load up on gold and / or GDX at this point. Who would have thought gold would be outperforming BTC Treasury companies in 2025?

Kicking myself for not having an allocation to GDXJ.  

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Fair enough, what whets your appetite then, in these turbulent times JC ?

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Well I still believe gold is a better alternative to holding fiat if that's what you mean. But not physical gold. Digital gold.  

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Physical gold for long-term holding.  Digital gold for short-term/trading position.

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Digital gold for short-term/trading position.

No. Trading gold is generally a fool's game for the private individual. 

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I was wondering how you could justify having digital gold, using digital gold for a long-term asset holding has huge counterparty risk.

 

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they estimated the Golden Week holiday generated 888 mln

LOL, golden number for Golden Week, (if you understand Chinese beliefs)

Edit, apologies to Danicriss who bet me to it, with his earlier post, which I did not read before posting mine.

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Yes but it's not $. It's the numbers of people moving. 

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" You can see why mainland politicians covet their neighbour and want to claim it." Yep, they want to claim it, then they'll control it, then they'll destroy the animal that it was through greed and lust for power.

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The author of these articles is always a negative ninny on the US. The US economy may have issues from time to time but it will always (in our lifetimes) be #1 in the world, unlike NZ which is a socialist basket case in all economic facets. Heck, our biggest international business (Fonterra brands $4.2B - chump change by US standards), cant even stand the heat and is being sold off to a private French company. Oh woe is NZ.

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Nup.

I'm guessing you have skin in a US-needing game? Or are an economist (that'll do it, ignorance-wise)?

The US was - and it's increasingly past tense - the biggest hegemony the planet has ever seen, and will ever see. Limits, growth, all that. And it is facing entropy it cannot surmount. 

GARY: The USA's Most Dangerous City? What I Actually Saw

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