sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

US jobless claims fall back to normal levels; global logistics issues persist; producer price pressure topping out; ATO on the warpath; UST 10yr 1.68%, oil and gold slip; NZ$1 = 71.6 USc; TWI-5 = 75

US jobless claims fall back to normal levels; global logistics issues persist; producer price pressure topping out; ATO on the warpath; UST 10yr 1.68%, oil and gold slip; NZ$1 = 71.6 USc; TWI-5 = 75

Here's our summary of key economic events overnight that affect New Zealand with news there are signs the global rush up of producer prices may be exhausting itself.

But first, we start today with better-than-expected jobless claims data in the US. The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits fell to 256,000 last week, the lowest since March 2020 and well below market expectations of 300,000. The number of new filings remains well above pre-pandemic trends of about 210,000 but is certainly moving closer with 2.17 mln on benefits now and the pre-pandemic level was 1.8 mln. This is all happening as the number of job openings stays close to record high, as workers try to find new jobs with better pay, working conditions, and flexibility.

Meanwhile, the Philly Fed factory survey slipped back and by a bit more than was expected. It is still expanding in that key industrial region and at an above average level, but cost pressures are starting to weigh. Also, the skilled labour pressures are seeing firms commit to much higher capital expenditure to lessen its reliance on labour-intensive aspects of their operations.

Meanwhile, there was an unexpected jump in existing home sales reported for September. They rose a sharpish +7% to an annual rate of 6.3 mln units in the month to their highest level since January. The shortage of houses for sale is now getting acute, and prices are rising a very fast (for them) +13% year-on-year

In Canada, their regular Government bond auction, this one for their 10 year maturity, resulted in a yield of 1.73% pa, sharply higher than the 1.45% pa of the previous equivalent event.

In China, the logistics challenge of getting goods out of the country continues. But it is a uniquely Chinese problem, as freight rates show. Overall however, containerised shipping rates are falling now, only distorted by the ex-China rates. The Baltic Dry bulk freight rates are falling now too. But the logjams at US ports remain severe and are impacting goods availability for the upcoming holiday season. The US is considering deploying the National Guard to provide the resources to clear backlogs quicker at their end.

In South Korea, producer prices are still rising at an unusually strong pace - just like in most other countries - but the September data suggests that this trend is probably topping out and not getting worse.

Consumer sentiment in the EU remained broadly stable in October, according to the latest survey. It is still mildly negative, but that is 'good' from an historical perspective in the EU.

In Turkey, (where their autocratic president has had family members take over their central bank), they cut their key benchmark rate by -200 bps, far larger than the -50 bps cut expected. That takes the rate down to 16%. But such amateur policy making is just depressing their exchange rate, now at a record low, and making inflation soar, now touching 20%. Even their attempts to sell cheap real estate to foreigners program is stalling now.

In Australia, it is becoming clearer that the sharp slowdown in China could feed a sustained drop in commodity prices and may in turn mean a period of well-below trend growth for Australia, with a sustained period of weak employment and wages growth. Then there could be fiscal implications that constrain the ability their government to offset the shock. But their exchange rate may cushion the impact - and they may be in a good position with commodities that support the global transition to a low carbon economy - meaning China's stumble may not hurt Australia as much as some think.

One mineral in hot demand right now is lithium carbonate. And mining giant Rio Tinto is forecasting a huge shortfall over the next 30 years.

And staying in Australia, the head of their tax office, the ATO, has said they are hunting for more than AU$33 bln in "missing tax" from various dodges, including AU$2.6 bln by large corporates, AU$12.5 billion by SMEs, and AU$8.4 bln from wealthy individuals.

In Australia Delta cases in Victoria have risen to 2235 cases reported there yesterday, and no improvement. There are now 22,889 active cases in the state and there were another 12 deaths yesterday. In NSW there were another 371 new community cases reported yesterday with 5,207 active locally acquired cases which is lower, and they only had one death yesterday. Queensland is still reporting zero new cases (although it looks like there might be one). The ACT has 28 new cases. Overall in Australia, more than 70% of eligible Aussies are fully vaccinated, plus 16% have now had one shot so far.

The UST 10yr yield opens today up +4 bps at 1.68%. The US 2-10 rate curve is flatter today at +124 bps with shorter rates rising faster and a bull flattening. Their 1-5 curve is steeper at +110 bps, while their 3m-10 year curve is also steeper at +163 bps. The Australian Govt ten year benchmark rate is firmer by +3 bp at 1.81%. The China Govt ten year bond is down -4 bps at 2.99%. The New Zealand Govt ten year is up to a new higher level at 2.44% and another +6 bps rise and nearly to a new three year high.

Wall Street has opened its Thursday session with little change on the S&P500, despite the positive jobless claims report. In overnight European markets, most were were down about -0.3% although London fell -0.5%. Yesterday, Tokyo fell a very sharp -1.9% in a late selloff, but Shanghai recovered a minor +0.2%. Hong Kong also fell back, down -0.5% on the day. The ASX200 ended its Thursday session flat and giving up good gains earlier in the session. The NZX50 ended with a minor +0.1% rise.

The price of gold has slipped -US$6 to US$1781/oz, probably the currency effect of a rebounding greenback.

And oil prices are sharply lower, down -US$1.50 to just under US$81.50/bbl in the US, while the international Brent price is also down, now just under US$83.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar opens today down -40 bps to 71.6 USc as commodity currencies take it on the chin today. Against the Australian dollar we are also a little softer at 95.7 AUc. Against the euro we are lower at 61.5 euro cents. That means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 75, but still well over the top of the 72-74 range of the past eleven months.

The bitcoin price has retreated somewhat today, down -5.1% from this time yesterday and is now at US$63,015. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been high at just over +/-3.5%.

The easiest place to stay up with event risk today is by following our Economic Calendar here ».

Daily exchange rates

Select chart tabs

Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
Daily benchmark rate
Source: RBNZ
End of day UTC
Source: CoinDesk

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

31 Comments

RE:Australia: ...they may be in a good position with commodities that support the global transition to a low carbon economy - meaning China's stumble may not hurt Australia as much as some think.

The Cost Of Going Green Is About To Get More Expensive

Polysilicon is a superrefine form of silicon used in solar panels for its semiconductor-like material properties. Spot prices for polysilicon bottomed at $6.30/kg in mid-2020 and have jumped 600% to $36.09/kg as of last week, according to BloombergNEF. 

Up
2

Seems like the temporary and transitory inflation might be entrenched and permanent instead. Time will tell of course but once it flows through to wage increases there is probably no going back without automation and technology gains. 

Up
4

The UST 10yr yield opens today up +4 bps at 1.68%. The US 2-10 rate curve is flatter today at +124 bps with shorter rates rising faster and a bull flattening.

You describe bear flattening, not bull flattening.

Yield Curve Re-Flattens After Hitting Resistance, 5Y At 20-Month Highs

Up
1

Why talk about inflation. 

Has not Mr Orr came out personally and assured the nation (though parroting Fed) that inflation is temporary and the confidence that he has said and the posistion that he helds, one has to believe him.

Is he ready to be crucify if proved that he lied and manipulated - that shiuld be talked about and not inflation Mr David. 

Up
3

You Don’t Have To Take My Word For It About Eliminating QE

Speaking with the Financial Times just last week, the new leader wants little to do with QQE and the rest, because it worked out well?

No.

Japan’s new prime minister has pledged to move the country away from neoliberalism as he lambasted his own party’s failure to deliver broad-based growth under the Abenomics programme that defined the economy for almost a decade…Kishida stressed his new economic approach — involving tax incentives for companies to raise wages and pay increases for nurses and care workers — would attempt to reverse the failures of the “trickle-down” theories and market-led reforms that have guided Japanese policymaking from the mid-2000s.

Kishida claims QQE and Abenomics achieved something for the real economy, though not much “trickled down” beyond certainly stocks moving up, leaving the vast majority with questions. Where’s the full recovery inflation, he didn’t need to ask.

Up
4

Looks like understanding is beginning, but translating words into action is the trick. Can't wait to see it happen.

I suggest the power players may feel a bit threatened by some necessary changes though.

Up
4

Looks like understanding is beginning, but translating words into action is the trick. Can't wait to see it happen.

Remember. Japan has infrastructure to die for now. From transport to housing, countries like NZ just don't compare. They have quite a bit in place for the transition. Not sure that NZ does. 

Up
1

Looks like bitcoin has crashed. Party's over guys. Pack up and head home.

It's dead for real this time. Honest.

Up
8

It's just on sale today.

Be quick.

Up
7

... empty the truck  ... chuck out those old tulip bulbs .... make space for as much Buttcoin as we can load on ...

Up
2

Bit rich to target bitcoin as being the tulip bubble.

*points at everything*

Up
14

Ah, the old tulip bulb chestnut

  • Did that bubble last 12 years?
  • Were tulips regulated by the SEC?
  • Was there a tulip ETF?
  • Did corporate treasuries hold tulips?
  • Was there a fixed supply of tulips?
  • Were tulips fungible, durable, portable and divisible?
  • did tulips have any utility like, I don't know, being a base layer for instantaneous trust-less global payments between unrelated parties?

Please check all that apply, thanks

Up
7

Is Bitcoin spelt T-U-L-I-P? No! Checkmate.

Up
0

Retail rushing to buy at >$100K is going to be a thing of beauty. Someone needs to provide exit liquidity for the "non critical thinkers".

Up
2

Just a thought:

"Wave 1: Wave one is rarely obvious at its inception.

Wave 2: Wave two corrects wave one, but can never extend beyond the starting point of wave one.

Wave 3: Wave three is usually the largest and most powerful wave in a trend. The news is now positive and fundamental analysts start to raise estimates.

Wave 4: Wave four is typically clearly corrective (The drop to $30k recently?)

Wave 5: Wave five is the final leg in the direction of the dominant trend. Everyone is bullish. Unfortunately, this is when many average investors finally buy in, right before the top. Volume is often lower in wave five than in wave three, and many momentum indicators start to show divergences (prices reach a new high, but the indicators do not reach a new peak). At the end of a major bull market, bears may very well be ridiculed."

Up
3

You are 100% correct. Wave 5 is underway, retail soon to fomo in at ~100k. They will be exit liquidity for the ones who understand. All over by mid January. The last 2 years have been for buying, now is the time to plan the selling. Do the opposite of the crowds. It really is not that hard to make huge $$ in crypto. Most people seem focused on winning an auction for a million dollar dump.. sorry I mean investment.. lol.

Up
3

HODL indefinitely seems to be working out alright.

Up
0

HODL always works until it doesn't

Up
0

Haha love it! 

But in all seriousness, you're right. Its dead and heading to zero, for the 100th time. Guess I'd better sell everything now and get a job at Paknsave.

...

Up
3

1 pm updates ... then 4 pm updates .... now we await a 10 am update : Joy ... we're transitioning from a Level 1 to 4 system , to a traffic lights model ...

.. buckle up boys & girls ... Queen Jacinda is about to spin a story for you .... .... Stay awake , this time !

Up
3

Nothing compared to the tale some have spun, for the last 200 years and particularly since WW2.

Growth forever on a finite planet was lie which was peddled; she merely held the parcel when the music stopped.

Better her than her oppo - at least she has empathy.

Up
0

Great article by Matthew Hooton today on the nonsense that is the Housing Supply Bill.

Up
3

'Ardern's performance on house price inflation is by far the worst of any Prime Minister since Norman Kirk'

So much for 'being kind', caring deeply about inequality and child poverty.

Phoney.

Up
7

Your country's Venezuela update is 45% complete. 

Up
5

Venezuela, left to its own devices, would have been fine. As would Vietnam, Iraq........  There's a common denominator.

It's called: the Empire strikes if you don't knuckle under and give it what you possess.

Up
1

Read this interesting article on inflation which claims it is not transitory. Could inflation be the tool that re-adjusts us from the life we have now to the one that is sustainable?

The Great Inflation of the 2020's | by umair haque | Oct, 2021 | Eudaimonia and Co (eand.co)

Up
1

Transitionary for an extended period.

Up
1

Yes, I noticed this oxymoron. One for the record.

Up
0

thanks for the link - that piece knocks ALL NEW ZEALAND JOURNALISM COVERING THE LIMITS TO GROWTH, TO DATE

into a cocked hat.

And it's even worst than that, because when you put it under their noses, they ignore it. RNZ - I'm talking about YOU.

Up
1

Has inflation ever been "transitory"? 

We've had periods of high inflation and low inflation constantly compounding. When has it ever reversed, especially in basic amenities and necessities?

And the solution is more wage inflation, more wealth illusion, ie make more money!

How's that working out for us? More tokens of decreasing value, yet we have a perverse logic that a higher number of tokens equals more wealth.

Humans, not the cleverest bunch after all. 

Up
1