Economy Watch

Risks facing the global economy pile up

Episode Summary

China new yuan lending underwhelms. China exports drop. India industrial production up. US sentiment dips. Bitcoin falls.

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.

And today we lead with news of an export setback in China that may signal a tougher path for them in the rest of 2024.

But first, this week will kick off the US earnings season which will run for a few weeks until the Q1-2024 results are all in. Bank profits will be early in this set, many key ones coming this week. The Americans will also release retail sales results, and some housing updates.

Retail sales updates will also come from China, along with their Q1-2024 GDP outcome, tomorrow. It is "impressive" they can report that, well before any other major economy. Eyes will be on their foreign direct investment data too, along with housing market activity results for March.

Australia will release its labour market data this week, and CPI inflation data will some from Japan, Canada, and of course New Zealand (on Wednesday).

Over the weekend, China reported its new bank lending levels and they picked up in March from February but the results still disappointed. March is usually a strong month for borrowing because banks tend to extend more credit at the end of each quarter to meet lending targets. But the ¥3.1 tln in new March lending was less than the ¥3.6 tln expected and the ¥3.9 tln in March 2023.

Meanwhile, China's exports tumbled in March. They dropped -7.5% from a year ago, reversing sharply from a +5.6% growth in the earlier month. This was very much worse than market forecasts, highlighting the Middle Kingdom's uneven recovery and perhaps suggesting global demand won't drive growth there. It may also be a sign that de-risking from China because of its terrible recent signals to investors is biting harder and earlier than anticipated.

It is not all difficult news in China. A survey shows that for the first time since the end of 2021, wage growth rates there are picking up again.

India's industrial production rose by +5.7% in February from a year ago, the latest data released over the weekend, but that missed analyst forecasts of +6% growth; however it was a faster expansion than in each of the prior three months. A year ago this expansion was running at 5.8%, so little change on that comparison.

It is only about 200 days until the November US presidential election and nervousness about that outcome is starting to show up in sentiment surveys. Consumers are apprehensive that the golden run could be crashed by the vote, or that things could destabilise ahead of it. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment poll is now reflecting some of that apprehension. However it is only off a 33 month high so we shouldn't make too much of this April dip and it remains more than +20% higher than year-ago levels. Still, the shift was noticed by financial markets. Wall Street dipped in their Friday session, bond yields slipped slightly, and the USD surged against all-comers on the risk-off mood.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.52% and unchanged from Saturday's close. A week ago this rate was 4.39%. 

The price of gold will start today lower by -US$6 from this time Saturday at US$2343/oz. We should note that this price hit its all-time high of US$2432 at about 4am Saturday morning. But it has been sharply down after that.

Despite extreme Middle East tensions, oil prices have been surprisingly stable over the weekend and still just on US$85/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is -50 USc lower at US$89.50/bbl. Both levels are about -US$2 less than a week ago. Interestingly, the head of the IEA strongly criticised European energy policy for "two monumental mistakes" - relying on Russian energy, and shifting away from nuclear power.

The Kiwi dollar starts today at just over 59.3 USc and down -10 bps from Saturday. Against the Aussie we are unchanged at 91.9 AUc. Against the euro we are little-changed as well at 55.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 69.2 and similar to Saturday and this time last week.

The bitcoin price starts today sharply lower at US$63,785 and down -5.6% from this time Saturday. At one point it got as low as US$60,908. Volatility over the past 24 hours has also been extreme at just on +/- 5.2%.

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.