Economy Watch

A tale of two markets


Listen Later

Kia ora,

Welcome to Wednesday’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 the equity markets and the bond markets are flashing quite different signals, and equity markets seem quite out of step with the operating economic data. When these vary, there is usually a reckoning, and that usually (but not always) results in an equity correction.

But first up today, the overnight dairy auction brought results similar to what the derivatives market expected, maybe slightly better because of show early season strength in WMP demand and prices. Volumes sold were the highest since October 2024. And helping the tone was the fall in the NZD which boosted the rise in local currency. Overall the event ended up +0.7% in USD and up +1.5% in NZD. The industry will be satisfied the new season is off to a good start.

On the butter demand front, there was a noted fall off in demand at these prices - except frim China and Middle East buyers. There is enough there to keep prices elevated, although to be fair the butter price did ease +3.8% at this event.

Meanwhile, the widely watched American ISM services PMI unexpectedly fell in July 2025 from June, and the result was lower than expected. The services sector is now nearly stagnant, with seasonal and weather factors having a negative impact on business. A slowdown was most evident in the fall in new orders - activity is still operating faster than new orders are arriving so that is not great for the future. Not slowing are price increases, so all the signs of stagflation here. However, the internationally-benchmarked S&P Global/Markit version told a more upbeat story.

US exports fell in June from May but the fall was only minor, and from a year ago there were up +3.3%. US imports fell more sharply in the month to be -1.4% below year-ago levels. But that only results in their trade deficit being back to mif 2024 levels. Or 2023 levels. The needle has moved very little.

But the RCM/TIPP sentiment survey rose in July although the move was minor. It mirrored the month's equity markets and this index also hit a 4 year high.

American household debt rose by +US$185 bln in the June quarter to a new record high of US$18.4 tln. That is now 60.6% of GDP. The flow of household debt into serious delinquency was mixed across debt types, with credit card and car loans holding steady, student loans continuing to rise, and mortgages edging up slightly.

In India, their services PMI tells a booming story. International orders and overall sales rose sharply from the fastest increase in business activity for 11 months. However, price pressures re-accelerated, so this boom comes with inflation consequences. It's a report in sharp contrast to the lackluster American equivalents. "Someone" is quite envious of their success and is threatening sharply higher tariffs.

Meanwhile Trump is signaling that their endless 'truce' with China will get another extension.

And China delivered a positive data surprise yesterday, with the private Caixin services PMI rising and by more than expected. (Remember the official NBS services PMI eased lower.) The Caixin China General Services PMI rose in July from June’s nine-month low with the fastest expansion in the services sector since May 2024, and with new business growing at the strongest pace in a year.

That is in contrast to the EU services PMI which remains weak, although it is still expanding.

Quarterly June data out today in Australia shows household spending rose at a good rate, up +5.1% from the same month a year ago - and the rate it rose from March was good too. Discretionary spending was strong. Western Australia was the only jurisdiction where spending fell. On a volume basis (after inflation's impact), it is up +0.7%.

Join us at 10:45am for the New Zealand labour market report for June, although it might just confirm the tough operating environment we are in.

The UST 10yr yield is now at 4.20%, up +1 bp from yesterday. 

The price of gold will start today at US$3,379/oz, up +US$7 from yesterday.

American oil prices have slipped back again, down another -US$1 to just under US$65.50/bbl with the international Brent price just over US$67.50/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar is at 59 USc and little-changed from yesterday. Against the Aussie we are down -30 bps at 91.3 AUc. Against the euro we are unchanged at 51 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today at just on 66.9, down -10 bps.

The bitcoin price started today at US$113,625 and down -1.4% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just under +/-1.2%.

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.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Economy WatchBy Interest.co.nz / Podcasts NZ, David Chaston, Gareth Vaughan, interest.co.nz


More shows like Economy Watch

View all
NZ Tech Podcast by Paul Spain

NZ Tech Podcast

5 Listeners

NZ Business Podcast - Paul Spain by Paul Spain

NZ Business Podcast - Paul Spain

3 Listeners

Gone By Lunchtime by The Spinoff

Gone By Lunchtime

27 Listeners

Pro Video Podcast by WorldPodcasts.com / Gorilla Voice Media

Pro Video Podcast

6 Listeners

The Mike Hosking Breakfast by Newstalk ZB

The Mike Hosking Breakfast

52 Listeners

Mobile Tech Podcast with tnkgrl Myriam Joire by WorldPodcasts.com / Gorilla Voice Media

Mobile Tech Podcast with tnkgrl Myriam Joire

33 Listeners

Electric Vehicle Podcast: EV news and discussions by Podcasts NZ

Electric Vehicle Podcast: EV news and discussions

8 Listeners

Maori Initiatives by Podcasts NZ / WorldPodcasts.com / Steven Hutana

Maori Initiatives

0 Listeners

The Happy Saver Podcast - Personal Finance in New Zealand by Ruth - Personal Finance Blogger

The Happy Saver Podcast - Personal Finance in New Zealand

27 Listeners

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science by Paul Spain

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science

6 Listeners

NZ Everyday Investor by Podcasts NZ / WorldPodcasts.com / Darcy Ungaro

NZ Everyday Investor

13 Listeners

The Front Page by NZ Herald

The Front Page

14 Listeners

The Leighton Smith Podcast by Newstalk ZB

The Leighton Smith Podcast

98 Listeners

The Detail by RNZ

The Detail

55 Listeners

Here's Why by Bloomberg

Here's Why

69 Listeners

The Property Academy Podcast by Opes Partners

The Property Academy Podcast

26 Listeners

Between Two Beers Podcast by Steven Holloway & Seamus Marten

Between Two Beers Podcast

121 Listeners

This Climate Business by Podcasts NZ / Vincent Heeringa

This Climate Business

1 Listeners

Shared Lunch by Sharesies

Shared Lunch

9 Listeners

The Curve by The Curve Platform

The Curve

15 Listeners

Keep The Change by nextAdvisory

Keep The Change

14 Listeners

Unhedged by Financial Times & Pushkin Industries

Unhedged

167 Listeners

5 in 5 with ANZ by ANZ

5 in 5 with ANZ

5 Listeners

Making Cents by Frances Cook

Making Cents

14 Listeners