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US jobs data uninspiring; US consumer credit sags; Canada jobs fall; EU-China talks hit snag; WTO ruling challenges Trump; UST 10yr 2.50%; oil firm, gold unchanged; NZ$1 = 67.2 USc; TWI-5 = 72

US jobs data uninspiring; US consumer credit sags; Canada jobs fall; EU-China talks hit snag; WTO ruling challenges Trump; UST 10yr 2.50%; oil firm, gold unchanged; NZ$1 = 67.2 USc; TWI-5 = 72

Here's our summary of key events overnight that affect New Zealand, with news the US economy as a world growth driver is losing its mojo.

Firstly, the US non-farm payrolls survey for March reported a gain of +196,000 new jobs which was just ahead of expectations. Unfortunately this didn’t make back any of the very poor February result which brought an insignificant revision. Factory jobs shrank. The total jobs gain in Q1 2019 averaged +180,000 per month which is -23% lower than for Q1-2018.

This same data showed their participation rate staying very low, their jobless rate unchanged, and average hourly earnings were up +3.2% in the year which is lower than expected and a decline from earlier months.

The US economy is still growing, but the expansion is fading. The NY Fed estimate is that Q1-2019 grew at just +1.4% and that may rise to +1.9% in Q2-2019. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow calculation is slightly higher at +2.1% ‘now’ and falling.

The US President is now calling for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates and bring back QE to simulate their economy. It’s a white flag on the supposed power of corporate tax cuts.

The US President also plans to appoint two new economic amateurs to the Federal Reserve board, both of who seem to want to peg the US dollar to gold.

US consumer credit growth dropped sharply and unexpectedly in February in data released this morning. The flow actually dropped more in February than it rose in January in an unusually large reversal.

Canada reported an unexpected drop in employment in March, although most other metrics remained unchanged.

Hong Kong and China markets were closed yesterday for a public holiday (Ancestors Day.

But US:China trade talks drag on. And China:EU talks seem to have hit a stumbling block on questions of access by EU companies to China’s markets.

While we reported yesterday that new German factory orders took an unwelcome decline, new data out today shows that factory production came in in February at better levels than were expected.

Overnight, the WTO published its first ruling about claiming “national security” as a reason for imposing tariffs, setting a legal precedent that will lead to a likely clash with the American Administration. The case involved Russia and the Ukraine, but concluded the WTO does have jurisdiction.

In Australia, new research presented at an RBA conference on low wage growth says casualisation of the workforce has had virtually no impact on the problem.

The UST 10yr yield is little-changed overnight at 2.50% but that is +9 bps higher than this time last week. Their 2-10 curve is wider at +18 bps and their negative 1-5 curve is narrower at -8 bps. The Aussie Govt 10yr is unchanged overnight at 1.90%, the China Govt 10yr is also unchanged at 3.27% because they are on holiday but this is up +19 bps in the week, while the NZ Govt 10 yr is at 2.03%, also up +20 bps since this time last week. Yesterday, local swap rates were unchanged.

Gold is unchanged overnight at US$1,291, and also little-changed for the week.

The VIX volatility index is lower this week at 13. The average over the past year has been 17. The average for 2017 was only 11 however. The Fear & Greed index we follow is firmly on the ‘greed’ side.

US oil prices are firm, now just on US$63/bbl while the Brent benchmark is at US$70/bbl. That is about +US$2 above where they were this time last week. And there was an unexpected rise in the US rig count this week, ending a seven week slide.

The Kiwi dollar is weaker this morning at 67.2 USc which is a whole -1c lower than this time last week. On the cross rates we are back down to 94.7 AUc which is an even bigger weekly drop. Against the euro we are at 60 euro cents. That puts the TWI-5 at 72.

Bitcoin is also a firmer at US$5,019 and a +22% gain for the week. This rate is charted in the exchange rate set below.

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

Daily exchange rates

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End of day UTC
Source: CoinDesk

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4 Comments

Nice job on the new presentation David. Enjoying finding my way round. If this isn't the best general business / political website in the country then I don't know what is. It it even getting social with the RBNZ story & others, along with the readers comments which always add to the story..
With Stuff now stuffed & the Herald now unheralded & FTA news on the telly so childish (& biased) to watch, I think interest.co.nz is right up there in terms of real news value.
PS: Even the news channels on pay tv are so hard to watch these days. They're mostly full of shit (which is another word for politically biased).

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Yes, love the new look - congrats. Only thing I couldn't find was a comments stream? I previously found that useful for a quick look at what article(s) was/were trending in comments. Often that was the way I selected/prioritised what to read.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/05/strong-jobs-number-dashes-recession-fea…

“The demise of the U.S. economy has been greatly exaggerated,” said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies.

Perhaps the same sentiment could be applied NZ economy – Mr Orr appears a little too twitchy?

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From the article linked to the gold standard comment - “Under a strict gold standard, paper money could be redeemed for physical gold. If you didn’t trust the government to maintain the value of the dollar, you could ask for gold instead.
It doesn’t take a Ph.D. to see the problem with the gold bugs’ argument. If they were right, the world would be experiencing hyperinflation right now as unconstrained governments run their currency-printing presses. Instead, the world’s leading central banks can’t even manage to raise inflation to their target levels of 2 percent a year. If anything, outright deflation appears to be the greater risk.”

Seems a biased/illogical comment. Governments obviously aren’t unconstrained, they still have to “borrow” the money into existence with yearly servicing requirements. If there wasn’t that then yes we would have hyperinflation.
Even still, considering the skyrocketing prices in seemingly most if not all asset classes since 1971 we kind of have gone through a period of slow motion hyper inflation if you will.

Nothing like a bit of straw manning for your Saturday.

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