Kia ora,
and welcome to Friday's Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the International edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we lead with news of that China's growth is slowing, but it is still at a healthy level.
But first, in a second day of Congressional testimony, US Fed Chairman Powell said that he sees few risks to the ongoing modest American economic expansion.
But markets are not giving the thumbs-up today with the S&P500 turning lower in afternoon trade and benchmark bond yields falling as a risk-aversion mood settles in. Prompting the shift is a sharp and unexpected rise in American jobless claims.
American producer prices rose by the most in six months in October, slightly better than expected, lifted by gains in the costs of goods and healthcare services. It is a result that underlines the Fed's recent public stance that it will probably not cut interest rates again in the near term.
The US budget deficit grew by more than a third in the first month of the new fiscal year as federal spending outpaced revenue growth, pushing the 12-month deficit past US$1 tln for the first ever in a non-recession period. The Americans are leaving the roof damaged when the sun is shining.
China’s key economic activity continued to slow in October as several major indicators posted multi-month or even multi-year lows. Retail sales were up +7.2% year-on-year and below expectations, industrial production was up +4.7% and also below forecasts, and the important fixed asset formation data, a key driver of their economy, was up +5.2% when a gain of +5.4% was expected. True, all these numbers are way above what most other countries can deliver, but they do indicate a continuing slowdown. But it is not sharp, and it certainly isn't a contraction. And it is miles better than for most OECD countries. And it doesn't indicate China is "on its knees" as the US Administration seems to think.
And the China data isn't all soft. Property sales picked up and new construction starts surged in October in a sign developers are seeing improved demand.
And China says it is in in-depth talks with the US about rolling back the American tariffs.
[Advert]
The foundation of sound investing is all about the ability to minimise risk by spreading investments across sectors, industries and companies.
Exchange-traded funds that track market indexes like the S&P 500 offer everyday investors – like you – the benefit of diverse holdings in the largest 500 companies listed on stock exchanges in the US.
Hatch gives you can access more than 500 ETFs from BlackRock’s megatrend ETFs to Vanguards Total Stock Market Index fund. Visit www.hatch.as/investing to easily diversify your portfolio.
Germany has narrowly avoided a recession, according to official data. The country's economy grew by +0.1% in the third quarter of the year after contracting in the previous three months, and the annual growth was down to +1.0%. But this was better than was expected.
For the EU as a whole, the growth was slightly better coming in at +1.4% and was also better than expected.
In Australia, official data shows the Australian economy lost -19,000 jobs in October, the first fall in three years, and their unemployment rate edged back up to 5.3%. Analysts had thought employment would rise +15,000 so the miss is substantial. Full time jobs fell more than part time jobs. That saw the AUD fall sharply and taking the NZD with it.
The UST 10yr yield is lower at 1.81% and an -8 bps fall.
Gold is up today, up +US$9 to US$1,472/oz.
US oil prices are a little softer at US$57/bbl. The Brent benchmark is just on US$62.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar is lower today at 63.7 USc having weakened overnight. On the cross rates we are holding at 94 AUc. Against the euro we are soft at 57.9 euro cents. That puts the TWI-5 at just on 69 and a -30 bps dip in a day.
Bitcoin is also lower at US$8,629 and a drop of -1.3% overnight.
You can find links to the articles mentioned today in our show notes.
Get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz and subscribe to receive this podcast in your favourite podcast app - we're on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or subscribe on our website.
Tell your friends and leave us a review - we welcome feedback from listeners.
Comentarios