Economy Watch

Fickle markets accept a global soft landing has been achieved

Episode Summary

Japan gets its embedded inflation. Taiwan rises. China ends new steel capacity. US ready to rate cuts. Australia ready to disconnect.

Episode Notes

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 lead with news it seems the global soft landing has been achieved.

But first, the week ahead will feature some chunky economic data from the world's largest economies but no first-tier data. This seems befitting of the final week of the summer break in the northern hemisphere when end the week with long weekends in the US and Canada (Labor Day). Then after a northern summer of fickle markets, it will be back to normal market trading. That often sets the tone for the rest of the year.

In the US it will be headlined with durable goods orders, another Q2 GDP estimate which is expected to show an improvement, and some sentiment indexes. In China, it is industrial profits data and August PMIs at the end of the week India chimes in with Q2 GDP. And Australia with its monthly inflation indicator.

Japanese CPI inflation was at 2.8% in July from a year ago, holding steady for the third straight month while remaining at its highest level since February. Electricity prices jumped, and other fuel costs rose too after the full end of energy subsidies in May. However costs fell for education and communication. Meanwhile, their core inflation rate hit a five-month high of 2.7% in July. Monthly, the CPI rose by +0.2% in July, the least in three months, after a +0.3% gain in June.

In his testimony to the Japanese Parliament, the central bank boss kept future rate hikes in play this year by turning a potentially messy parliamentary hearing into a relatively straightforward reiteration of policy. These were his first public remarks following recent high volatility on equity markets. Since, things have settled nicely in his favour.

Taiwanese retail sales rose +3.4% in July from a year ago, a slight slowing of the pace of increase from June. Meanwhile their industrial production rose a very strong +12.3% in July on the sale basis, much of it due to strong international demand. This is a big turnaround because you might recall that a year ago it was contracting under election uncertainty and PRC pressure.

In China, they have suddenly closed its process for approving new steel plants. That comes after widespread negative global reactions to dumped steel products after a deep slump in local demand. In the past required Beijing authorities required the elimination of existing capacity before approving new plants. Those rules no longer apply. No new steel capacity will be approved.

China's economic stumbles are having no global impact.

In the US in his widely anticipated Jackson Hole speech, Powell gave the financial markets clear signals, and they reacted accordingly. He indicated the central bank will cut its interest rate in the September 19 meeting (NZT) noting that the US labour market is cooling quickly following the softer jobs report in July and the downward revision to payrolls this week. He also said the FOMC has gained further confidence that inflation is slowing to their 2% target, warranting a clear view that it is time to adjust monetary policy to less restrictive conditions.

The USD sank, equities rose, and bond yields eased a bit more than was already priced in.

This week's upcoming PCE inflation gauge (expect 2.6%, down from 3.4%) is widely expected to confirm the Fed's expectation that inflation is tracking as they need it.

Meanwhile American new home sales surged +10.6% in July from the previous month to an annualised rate of 739,000, well above market expectations of a +1% increase. It was the sharpest increase in sales since August of 2022 and the highest number of homes since May 2023 and the July level is +5.6% higher than the same month in 2023.

In commercial property markets things are getting decidedly tough in the US. A big-money-backed commercial property fund has suffered another fierce ratings downgrade, by Moody's, in fact to the lowest junk rating possible, 'C', a fast downgrade from an earlier August re-rating.

Canada's rail lockout has ended quickly with an Ottawa central government intervention to block the employer action. But just as they did the union filed notices of strike action on their part, to start Monday (Canadian time).

Meanwhile after two months of dips in May and June, Canadian retail sales rose in July in a +0.6% month-on-month jump, but to be only +0.2% higher than a year ago.

Canadian manufacturing sales also rose in June, better than expected.

In Australia, their "right to disconnect" law comes into effect today. Employees can ignore contact from the boss outside business hours, except where that is unreasonable. The problem is, the law is silent on what is "unreasonable". So its going to be messy until that is clarified, and that will probably require expensive litigation.

The UST 10yr yield is still at just on 3.80% and unchanged from Saturday. 

The price of gold will start today up +US$2 from Saturday at US$2512/oz. That is below its August 23 record high of US$2514/oz.

Oil prices are holding just under US$75/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just under US$78.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar starts today still up after its Saturday jump at 62.3 USc. Against the Aussie we are still at 91.7 AUc. Against the euro we are still at 55.7 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at 69.9.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$64,173 and up a sharpish +6.4% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been low however at just on +/- 0.7%.

You can find links to the articles mentioned today in our show notes.

You can get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.

Kia ora. I'm David Chaston. And we will do this again tomorrow.