Davos din starts. China adds banking system liquidity. Canucks depressed. Japanese machine tool orders recover. Aussie judge lays into 'cultural' defenders.
Kia ora,
Welcome to Tuesday’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.
And today we lead with news in the shadow of closed American markets.
First, remember today is a public holiday in the US - Martin Luther King Birthday. Both the bond and stock markets are closed.
First we should note that the Davos talkfest is underway again. It will have no impact this year despite the headlines it generates, just as it hasn't had for years. But both China and Hong Kong senior officials will be there to try and divert attention from Taiwan's free elections and Hong Kong's recent clampdown moves.
In China, their central bank did not cut its medium term lending facility rate as was expected. It held it at 2.5%. But it did add much more to banking system liquidity, a +¥216 bln (+NZ$47 bln) net injection from its overall ¥995 bln (NZ$222 bln) offering yesterday. This was a surprise (unexpected) move. Markets are now absorbing the implications of these two policy actions.
In Canada, the Business Outlook survey run by their central bank reported further declines in sentiment and now there is barely more 'positive' views than 'negative' ones. If anything the negative momentum is building. Almost 40% of firms surveyed said that are suffering sales declines. The same survey found that price pressures are easing however.
Japanese machine tool orders revealed a recent recovery in December, up +9.2% from November driven by strong local orders, up more than +15% on the same basis. These recent gain a reduced the year-on-year deficit to under -10% and its least since late 2022.
Indian exports rose strongly in December from November, up +13% on that basis, but were only +1% higher than the same month a year ago. The Red Sea choke effects haven't hit them yet.
EU industrial production withered further in November, down -0.3% from October to be -5.8% lower than the same month a year ago. It is not a healthy track overall, but was particularly hurt by Ireland, Belgium and the Netherlands. Showing good gains were Denmark especially, but also Sweden. Even France managed a year-on-year rise. But not so Germany. (If the UK was still included, it would have been a drag too, although not by as much as the average.)
Meanwhile, Germany released its full year 2023 GDP result which recorded a small -0.3% drop. That was far worse than the +1.8% expansion in 2022 although it was what was expected. The 10 year long-run annual gain has been +1.2% so 2023 was disappointing all round for them and they had the dubious distinction of being the worst performing major economy in 2023. But they are not yet in "recession" if your definition is two straight declining quarters; despite the -0.3% drop in Q4 from Q3, their Q3 change was revised to be flat.
In Australia, there has been a rather remarkable legal decision handed down relating to a gas pipeline proposal and "cultural heritage". Justice Natalie Charlesworth rejected claims on behalf of a group of Tiwi Islanders that the proposed pipeline would damage Sea Country and anger two creatures of their Dreaming stories – Ampiji, the rainbow serpent and the Crocodile Man. Her judgment slammed the evidence based on “cultural mapping” presented by the taxpayer-funded Environmental Defenders Office as “so lacking in integrity that no weight can be placed” on it and said there was “a significant degree of divergence” in the evidence given by Tiwi Islanders. She called the EDO positions "confection" and "made up" by their lawyers, and not supported by the Tiwi Islanders themselves.
The UST 10yr yield starts today at 3.98% and up +4 bps from this time yesterday.
The price of gold will start today up another +US$6/oz from yesterday at just on US$2055/oz.
Oil prices are marginally softer at just under US$72.50/bbl in the US and down by -50 USc. The international Brent price is now at just under US$77.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at just under 62 USc and down almost -½c from this time yesterday. Against the Aussie we are down -¼c at 93.1 AUc. Against the euro we are almost -½c lower at 56.6 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 70.5 and -40 bps lower.
The bitcoin price starts today lower again, now at US$42,485 and down another -1.0% from yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours however has been modest at +/-1.5%.
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.