China Drops Another Mixed Bag Of Data
Anyone hoping for a clear guide as to the health of the Chinese economy from yesterday’s key data drop for January and February would have found just more confusion.
Read MoreAnyone hoping for a clear guide as to the health of the Chinese economy from yesterday’s key data drop for January and February would have found just more confusion.
Read MoreGrowing support for higher taxes on the rich and greater government intervention in the economy suggest median voters have shifted to the left. Support for economic rationalist policies has fallen.
Read MoreJanuary lending data yesterday from the Australian Bureau of Statistics confirmed Reserve Bank figures at the end of February – demand and deals with investors have dried up, lending to owner-occupiers is slowing but loans to business are rising.
Read MoreAnother fall in business conditions and in confidence last month, according to the National Australia Bank’s business survey – with the weakening pushing the readings below long term average levels for the first time in months.
Read MoreOn the face of it, China’s trade figures for February were terrible – but don’t believe the hype because it wasn’t as bad as first thought.
Read MoreChina’s inflation readings for February at the weekend did nothing to quell the idea that the economy is trundling along in low gear.
Read MoreAustralia recorded its second largest trade surplus in history in January thanks to surging prices of copper, gold exports plus solid prices for LNG, iron ore and resilient prices for some types of coal, plus alumina.
Read MoreRetailers suffered another bleak month in January, with a weak start for 2019 after the surprise slide in Christmas sales.
Read MoreAustralian growth slowed even more in the December quarter. Growth may bounce back a bit this year, but the housing downturn will likely constrain it to around 2- 2.5%.
Read MoreJust to make it clear there won’t be an interest rate rise in Australia this year and probably most if not all of 2020 as well – especially not after the second weak quarter of economic growth in a row.
Read MoreToday’s national accounts for the three months to December are not expected to be brilliant. In fact, at best they could be between 0.2 percentage points to 0.4 – while some pessimists believe the reading could be a negative 0.1 because of the weakness in household income.
Read MoreThe Chinese leadership has lowered economic growth targets to a range of 6.0% to 6.5% while at the same time revealing plans for tax cuts and other stimulatory moves.
Read MoreNo change in rates from the Reserve Bank yesterday, now for what’s expected to be a weak GDP figure from the December quarter national accounts to be released later this morning.
Read MoreOn a seasonally adjusted basis building approvals started 2019 in January with a small fall but on a trend basis (which is designed to smooth out seasonal adjustment fluctuations) approvals fell 3.2% in January to hit their lowest since 2013.
Read MoreApart from the Reserve Bank board meeting and a slow of figures starting with the December quarter growth figures in Australia, the February jobs report from the US is the most important event this week for markets outside Australia – unless Donald Trump and China resolve the trade war, or decide to prolong the pain through disagreement.
Read MoreThe coming week is one of the big weeks of the year for the Australian economy – the first week of March, June, September, and December is when the monthly meeting of the Reserve Bank board, the national accounts for the preceding quarter and start of month economic data such as retail sales, building approvals and trade are released.
Read MoreFigures out yesterday confirmed not only are Australian companies spending more on investment, but the outlook is the strongest for three years.
Read MoreNow here’s a bit of nasty news for the Reserve Bank and others – the value of construction work done across Australia in the final three months of 2018 fell by a sharp 3.1% to $51.603 billion (seasonally adjusted) instead of rising by 0.4% as forecast by the market.
Read MoreThe threat of an interest cut from the Reserve Bank has been held at bay for a few more months after a better than expected jobs performance in January that belied the wider gloom about the economy and key sectors such as retailing.
Read MoreFive key global charts to watch as to whether this will be the case are: global business conditions PMIs; global inflation; the US yield curve; the US dollar; and global trade growth.
Read MoreWage growth actually slowed a touch in the December quarter according to data released yesterday in the latest Wage Price Index from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Read MoreMore evidence that the pace of economic activity in China – especially in manufacturing – is weakening.
Read MoreOn the face of it China’s January trade performance was better than expected but once again it has been the timing of the Lunar New Year holidays in February that has distorted the figures.
Read MoreThe Reserve Bank of NZ has left its key Official Cash Rate (OCR) steady at 1.75% and says it expects to maintain this level for at least the next two years.
Read MoreAs expected home lending fell sharply in December to be down sharply for 2018 as a whole as loans for apartments and units fell steeply followed loans for owner-occupiers.
Read MoreDespite a small improvement in business conditions in January after December’s sharp fall and a small improvement in business confidence, the National Australia Bank has had significant change of heart and is now forecasting that the Reserve Bank will leave rates on hold for a long time – well into next decade – but with a rate cut not out of the question.
Read MoreThe seasonally adjusted trade surplus for December of more than $3.6 billion was the second largest ever and moreover, Australia notched up a trade surplus in every month of 2018 – the first time every that has been achieved.
Read MoreThe Reserve Bank of Australia has revealed it has made a major change in its monetary policy stance, with a cut in the cash rate now even money bet.
Read MoreDecember’s retail and January car sales slowed more than normal with new figures showing big falls in activity.
Read MoreRates have now been on hold at the record low for 30 months straight, but financial markets are starting predicting the next rate move is more likely to be a cut than a hike as declining house prices impact on household spending.
Read MoreThe Reserve Bank board will find one or two points of interest from yesterday’s data releases at its first meeting today, but it won’t change the policy stance of no move in rates for the time being.
Read MoreUnlike the worst fears of her critics, the NZ Labour-led government of PM Jacinda Arden has not been bad for the country’s economy or its credit rating.
Read MoreThe change in approach from the US Federal Reserve in its post-January meeting statement for the Open Market Committee is another example of how investors and markets should be ‘careful what they wish for’.
Read MoreThe chances for more rate rises in the US this year have been reduced dramatically after a change of heart by the US Federal Reserve.
Read MorePressures remains on the Reserve Bank to cut interest rates after another weak quarter for inflation in the three months to December.
Read MoreNow December was either a one-off so far as business conditions are concerned, or it saw the start of a new lower trend that should see concern rise about the further direction of Australian economic growth.
Read MoreAustralia’s job creation boomed slowed sharply in 2018, but growth still topped long term averages according to the December Labour Force report from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) yesterday.
Read MoreJapan has joined the likes of China, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, and Indonesia in revealing a sharp slowdown in exports.
Read MoreAs expected the slowdown in the Chinese economy saw 2018 GDP grow by 6.6% – the lowest annual growth rate for 29 years, supporting the picture of recent weaker performance seen in other indicators such as investment, retail sales, and industrial production.
Read MoreThe final dump of Chinese economic data for December and 2018 has confirmed the economy is in the midst of a worrying slowdown.
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