Eyes on some big key US decisions including for tariffs. Better balance for Canada jobs. Strong Indian loan growth, Taiwan exports. EU cements huge new FTA.
Kia ora,
Welcome to Monday’s Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we start with news of plenty of trade and economic action, some good, some not so.
But first, some official data will start to be released locally this week, with November building permits and employment indicators, both for November, and the monthly December "selected price increases" covering mainly food and rent. We get the latest update to the NZIER business confidence survey this week too.
In Australia, they will also release November building permit data, job vacancy data and household spending data, all for November too. The Westpac consumer sentiment survey will come as well, along with inflation expectation survey results.
China's trade data for December will come out this week, and we expect the 2025 surplus to exceed US$1 tln. They will also release December new yuan lending data, expected to be better than November.
From Japan we will get machine tool order data. In India, it will be about inflation data.
In the US, the early Q4-2025 earnings reports will come from their big banks. Retail sales data is also due. But most eyes will be on the US December CPI result which is expected to be unchanged at 2.7%, although it is from an agency where the President inserted a lackey to keep an eye on their data.
That same agency released their December US non-farm payrolls report over the weekend and it was something of a damp squib, but markets seemed to like it. The US economy added just +50,000 payroll jobs in December, less than a downwardly revised +56,000 in November and below forecasts of +60,000. These are the seasonally adjusted numbers. The raw data shows payrolls falling -192,000 and quite different to the equivalent small rise in December 2024. The broader population survey has overall employment falling -335,000 in December (double the 2024 change).
The US unemployment rate ended the year at 4.4%, a tick less than November's 4.5% but well above December 2024's 4.1% (and December 2023's 3.8%). Average weekly earnings rose +3.8% from a year ago, keeping pace with inflation.
Most analysts now see almost no chance of a rate cut at the Fed's January 29, 2026 meeting. Trump's inserted Miran remains an almost lone voice.
US consumer debt trends are showing similar signs of stress and are looking topped-out. Total debt rose by only +US$4.2 bln in November and well below market expectations of a modest +$10 bln rise. It is equivalent to a +1% annual rise. Revolving debt (credit cards, etc.) fell at an annual rate of -1.9% while non-revolving debt, which includes car and student loans, went up +2.0%.
So the latest update of a key consumer sentiment survey (this one from the University of Michigan) remained very low but little-changed in January from December and -25% lower than year-ago levels, -17% lower than two years ago.
And we should note that markets are now expecting the US Supreme Court to rule on its tariff case possibly on Thursday.
In Canada, employment was little-changed in December, up a minor +8200. But full-time employment grew +50,100 while part-time jobs shrank -42,000. It will be a rebalancing they will welcome. Their employed workforce is 21.1 mln, up +1.1% from a year ago. Analysts see much less of a chance of interest rate hikes in 2026 after this labour market result.
In Japan, household spending was expected to bounce back in November after the weak October result. It did, but by very much more than expected. That was enough to take it up +2.9% from a year ago and very much better than the market expectations for a -0.9% decline. It was the steepest rise since May, supported by higher winter-related purchases and easing inflation pressures on some essential goods.
Chinese CPI inflation is staying very low even if it did rise slightly in December. It came in +0.8% higher than year ago levels, marginally higher than in November. Beef prices were up +6.9% however from a year ago, sheep meat prices up +4.4% on the same basis. Milk prices (now bundled into "dairy products") were down -1.8% on that annual basis. All these food price rises were a key reason for the overall CPI rise.
Taiwanese exports were up +43% in December from a year ago, rising to the second-highest monthly level on record. The pace slowed from an unusual +56% burst in November. It says a lot about expectations in Taiwan that analysts were expecting a +46% rise.
Indian bank lending rose +14.5% in December from a year ago, the most in two years.
In Europe, retail sales rose at a + 2.3% year-on-year volume rate in November, up from a revised +1.9% in October and well above market expectations of just +1.6%. The return of rising consumer spending will be welcomed in the bloc. This impulse is broadly back to what they had in the 2017-2019 period.
We should note as well that the EU, after overcoming deep dissension among its members (especially by France), gave the green light to a sweeping free trade deal with four South American countries (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay) to create one of the largest free-trade zones in the world, connecting markets with more than 700 million people. The deal probably got over the line because of reaction to Trump's isolationist policies. It is interesting that this deal includes Argentina, which the US is propping up financially.
The UST 10yr yield is now just over 4.17%, down -1 bp from this time Saturday, down -2 bps from a week ago.
The price of gold will start today at US$4508/oz, and up +US$8 from Saturday, up +US$195/oz from a week ago. Silver is now up at US$80/oz. Aluminium is on the move up as well at US$3148/tonne and apart from the pandemic distortion, that is a new record high.
American oil prices are down -50 USc from Saturday at just over US$59/bbl, while the international Brent price is still at just under US$63.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar is unchanged from Saturday, now at just under 57.3 USc. Against the Aussie we are also unchanged at 85.7 AUc. Against the euro we are little-changed as well at just under 49.3 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 61.4, and unchanged from Saturday, down -30 bps from a week ago.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$90,953 and down -0.5% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been very low at just on +/- 0.4%.
You can get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.
Kia ora. I'm David Chaston and we’ll do this again tomorrow.