China toys with CPI deflation while PPI deflation gets worse. India's factories dip in August. US PPI hardly rises; Canada jobs jump, Fitch cool on France
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 China's deflation Pressures keep on coming. And in the US disinflation rolls on, which they hope will end soon.
This coming week will be another one with chunky data releases. The biggest will be on Wednesday, our own CPI result for the Q3-2024 period (Markets expect 2.0%). That that will follow the Tuesday's update of the September REINZ results.
We won't be the only country reporting inflation data; we also get that from Canada, India and Japan this week. At the end of the week, the ECB will be reviewing its policy interest rate. And all week we will be getting American Q3 earnings reports.
China will report its Q3-2024 GDP result on Friday, likely to fall well short of its 5% target.
Over this weekend, China released sets of key data. The tiny bit of consumer price inflation they had disappeared in September, up now only +0.4% from a year ago. Beef, lamb, and milk prices all went backwards again. Their producer prices deflated at a faster rate. And we are now waiting for their new yuan loan data which isn't expected to be very strong (about +¥1 tln, and less than half the June level. So far, debt-induced growth hasn't worked).
Meanwhile Chinese Ministry of Finance officials announced some more modest steps to "support the economy" and signaled much more is to come. It was a much-anticipated set-piece that left observers, and markets, underwhelmed.
Key banks made simultaneous coordinated moves - signaled a while ago to be fair - to cut mortgage borrowing costs, as a practical measure to reduce the pressure on homeowner household budgets. They will come into effect in the last week of October.
And coming up some time this week, the Chinese central bank is expected to signal lower wholesale borrowing costs in its 1-Year MLF announcement.
In South Korea, they have started cutting their policy rates too, although not as aggressively as New Zealand. The Bank of Korea policy rate is now 3.25% after its first rate cut (-25 bps) since May 2020. That came after data showed their GDP shrank in Q2-2024 and their September inflation slowed to 1.6%, the lowest since February 2021.
India's industrial production took a surprise drop in August from a year ago, its first retreat since October 2022. Few saw that coming. And they downwardly revised the +4.7% rise in July.
Interestingly, the Indian currency is under pressure, and outflow levels have been high. The Indian rupee has hit a record low against the US Dollar, (but against the NZD it has been pretty flat since 2020).
In the US, producer prices hardly rose in September. US factory gate prices were flat in the month from August and missing expectations of a +0.1% rise. On an annual basis, PPI inflation eased to a 7-month low of 1.8%.
US consumer sentiment was little-changed in October according to the University of Michigan survey, holding at a level it has broadly been at since May. There was a slight dip from the prior month, something that is probably just related to election uncertainties.
For those who follow such things, we can report no surprises in the October update of the USDA WASDE report. But they did raise their beef import forecasts marginally again, and lowered their US milk production forecasts, again.
Canada reported a good +47,000 rise in employment in September, almost double what was expected. Better still, full-time jobs rose +112,000 while part-time roles shrank -65,000. Their jobless rate slipped to 6.5% when a rise was anticipated
Ratings agency Fitch has downgraded their sovereign rating for France from 'Stable' to 'Negative', but still at AA-. They say “Fiscal policy risks have increased since our last review". (Fitch have New Zealand at AA+, Stable.)
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.07% and unchanged from Saturday. A week ago it was at 3.99% so up +8 bps since then.
The price of gold will start today at US$2657/oz and down -US$3 from this time Saturday. That is up +US$8 from a week ago.
Oil prices are holding at just on US$75.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is still at US$79/bbl. A week ago these prices were at these same levels, so no-change in a week.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 61.1 USc and downa minor -10 bps from this time Saturday. Against the Aussie we are unchanged at 90.5 AUc. Against the euro we are also unchanged at 55.9 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today now at 69.3, and unchanged from Saturday at this time. But that is -40 bps lower than a week ago.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$62,627 and up +0.6% from this time Saturday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just on +/- 1.1%.
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.