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US data generally positive; Japan ready for rate rise, machine tool orders strong; Taiwan exports stars again; German exports rise; UST 10yr at 4.17%; gold holds, silver at new record; oil falls on glut fears; NZ$1 = 57.8 USc; TWI-5 = 62.1

Economy / news
US data generally positive; Japan ready for rate rise, machine tool orders strong; Taiwan exports stars again; German exports rise; UST 10yr at 4.17%; gold holds, silver at new record; oil falls on glut fears; NZ$1 = 57.8 USc; TWI-5 = 62.1

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news the world is awash in better economic news today in many of the world's largest economies.

First, the overnight dairy Pulse auction of the two key milk powders brought more weakness. The SMP price fell another -0.5% from last week's full auction, but as the NZD is rising, it was actually down -1.6% in NZD terms. The WMP fared worse, down -3.6% on the same basis in USD, down -4.2% in NZD. It is not a good trajectory.

In the US there were some key labour market reports out today. First the weekly ADP private payrolls update for last week recorded a small +5000 gain which follows five consecutive weeks where they recorded more than a -27,000 loss of jobs (which was consistent with what they reported for the November month).

And the catchup JOLTS report for October showed little-change from September, but job openings were a little higher than anticipated for both months.

And the widely watched SME sentiment survey from the NFIB was marginally better than expected, up slightly from October, but just back to the levels it has been at since May although that still leaves it at a slight net negative. Interestingly, the retail Redbook survey eased back a bit last week to the average rise it has recorded since later 2023, which mirrors retail inflation that is juiced by tariff-taxes. It is perhaps an indicator that the Thanksgiving seasonal retail was not as strong as hoped.

There is more evidence that Trump is just plain dumb. After his failure to get the Chinese to buy US soybeans at scale, he is rolling out US$16 mln in taxpayer support for some farmers which will actually be very little for most. Now he is threatening swingeing tariffs on Canadian fertilizer imports of potash, oblivious that even if that blocks cheap Canadian imports, it will leave high-priced local product, with a net loss for farmers, probably exceeding US$15 bln. Even a high school economics student can see the flaws in his approach, which embeds higher costs on Americans.

Trump has also handed China a huge AI chip win, agreeing to let Nvidia sell its best stuff to China. This will allow China to close the gap on the US AI advantages much faster now. The US security community is gobsmacked. China may not buy a lot, but it does give them access to the technology.

In Japan, machine tool orders were strong in November, up +14.2% from a year ago continuing expanded growth over the past seven months. But domestic demand actually fell. It was foreign orders that were the star here, up by +23%.

Next week, there will be an important central bank meeting in Tokyo. Overnight remarks by the Bank of Japan governor seemed to set the groundworks for another rate rise on the basis that inflation is embedding, especially wage inflation, and that the risks of deflation there are receding on a permanent basis. Japanese long term interest rates are now approaching 2% and a twenty year high.

Taiwanese exports were exceptionally strong again, as we have come to expect. They surged +56% in November from a year ago to a record US$64 bln, up from a 49% gain in October and again better that market expectations for a 41% rise. It is strong global demand for their chips and AI technology that is powering these amazing results.

German exports also rose in October, a surprise because that had risen strongly in September and a small correction was expected.

We get US export data on Friday, and in contrast to Japan, Germany, Taiwan and China, they are currently expected to show a retreat.

In Australia, the RBA kept the cash rate on hold at Tuesday's review as expected. Their review was slightly more hawkish, firmly focused on the upside risks to inflation. And that is what financial markets reacted to with bond yields rising as a result.

And staying in Australia, the NAB Business Confidence Index slipped in November from October, but stayed just positive, although the weakest reading since April. The survey showed business conditions softened after declines in sales and profitability.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.17%, unchanged from this time yesterday. The key 2-10 yield curve is still at +57 bps. Their 1-5 curve is now positive by +14 bps and the 3 mth-10yr curve is still positive by +45 bps. The China 10 year bond rate is unchanged at 1.86%. The Japanese 10 year bond yield is down -2 bps to 1.96%. The Australian 10 year bond yield starts today at 4.78%, up +5 bps after the RBA MPS. The NZ Government 10 year bond rate starts today at 4.61%, also up +5 bps and also influenced by the Aussie move.

Wall Street has started its Tuesday with the S&P500 up +0.1% and not making back yesterday's dip. Overnight, European markets were mixed between Paris's -0.7% drop and Frankfurt's +0.5% rise. Yesterday, Tokyo ended its Tuesday trade up +0.1%. Hong Kong was down another sharpish -1.3% and Shanghai ended down -0.4%. Singapore edged up +0.1%. The ASX200 ended its Tuesday with a -0.4% retreat. And the NZX50 finished down -0.2%.

The price of gold will start today at US$4217/oz, and up +US$26 from yesterday. And we should note that silver has set a new record high, over US$60/oz.

American oil prices are down -US$1 again at just over US$58/bbl, while the international Brent price is just under US$62/bbl. Analysts are sow saying a 'super glut' of oil is on the way, and downward price pressures will rise from here.

The Kiwi dollar is +10 bps firmer from yesterday, now at just on 57.8 USc. Against the Aussie though we are essentially unchanged at 87.1 AUc. Against the euro we are up +20 bps at 49.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 62.1, and also up +20 bps from yesterday.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$94,444 and up +5.1% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been moderate, at just over +/- 2.4%.

Daily exchange rates

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Source: CoinDesk

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15 Comments

Trump won't be the only one struggling to sell grain.

Global cereal production to exceed 3-billion mark, stocks-to-use ratio highest in decades

FAO’s latest forecast for world cereal production in 2025 has been revised upward this month to 3 003 million tonnes, marking the first time the global output is estimated to surpass the 3-billion-tonne level.

The forecast for world cereal stocks by the close of seasons in 2026, already projected at a record level, is revised further upward this month and now stands at 925.5 million tonnes, an increase of 56.8 million tonnes, or 6.5 percent, from their opening levels.

https://www.fao.org/worldfoodsituation/csdb/en/

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Does that mean world hunger is now solved? Or will they just feed it to pigs in China...

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Yeah. 30-40% will end up stock feed (70-80% for soybeans) so doesn't bode well for kiwi dairy farmers. Borlaug solved world hunger decades ago. The fact that India is now the world's largest rice exporter was never predicted by the experts.

Ehrlich also said, "I have yet to meet anyone familiar with the situation who thinks India will be self-sufficient in food by 1971." He insisted that "India couldn't possibly feed two hundred million more people by 1980."

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I wonder when Ozempic use is going to start showing up in reduced demand as well. Obesity rates are falling in the US already, although I think there's some evidence that those on it tend to move to higher quality foods to maintain nutrition. More meat and fewer carbs might end up in more overall grain usage. 

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The link to the article in the financial post also discusses rice coming in. Trump accuses india and others including Viet Nam of 'Dumping' their rice in the US. But that just shows how stupid he is. They don't have to 'dump' it, when they can legitimately produce it cheaper than US producers. It's ironic, but tariffs are actually for that purpose, protecting a local industry.

Another thing Trump has done in the last couple of days is release their national security strategy which has a big focus on immigration. Curiously I tend to agree with him on this as a lot of immigration is from places where no one would really want to live because the government is a tyranny. Time to fix the UN maybe?

 

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Yeah but that's sort of the premise of refugees right? Your country thinks it's morally superior and/or has in some way contributed to the conditions of the source country, so agrees to rescue those people and put a roof over their head. They're always the riskiest immigrants and potentially the least able to quickly contribute economically, though I imagine in many cases they're grateful.

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 And we should note that silver has set a new record high, over US$60/oz.

I thought silver at these prices could only happen when we were barricaded and armed while eating cold food from a tin can.  

And a trifecta in the metals not seen for 40+ years: silver, gold, copper - all hitting record highs in the same year.

The more conspiracy minded would suggest it's signaling a breakdown of the monetary system.  

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And yet today’s nominal silver price is still far below its real, inflation adjusted, all time high. 

Silver would need to reach around $190-$200 today to match its 1980 peak in real terms.

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This is the problem with the phrase "all time high". Unless you inflation adjust it its meaningless. 

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It wasn't that long ago (circa 2018) JJ you were replying to my comments about viewing housing in real terms (ie inflation adjusted) as being meaningless and pointless and misleading. And look at you now!!

Your growth in these matters is commendable. 

 

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I wouldn't read too much into it. Prices are going up and down all over the place, for example dairy. 

The best way to make money these days is to speculate/gamble. Of course it is a zero sum game; one person's win is the greater fool's loss. 

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The best way to make money these days is to speculate/gamble. Of course it is a zero sum game; one person's win is the greater fool's loss. 

Well JPM and their mates have had the gold / silver mkts on a string for as long as I can remember. Nobody complained. As long as the Ponzi was running on all cylinders. Who would care about their manipulation? The greater good is Ponzinomics, right?  

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Which ponzi are you referring too? Houses, Bitcoin, silver, gold, Trump coin, Nvidia, ...

The true test of inflation is the cost of a pie at the local bakery I reckon. 

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Price of mince?

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Which ponzi are you referring too? Houses, Bitcoin, silver, gold, Trump coin, Nvidia, ...

Such a boomer thing to say. The Aotearoa economy doesn't rely on credit creation PMs, BTC / crypto, semiconductors. 

What's more, they form <5% of any water cooler discussion topics.  

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