Economy Watch

Investors rush US alternatives


Listen Later

Kia ora,

Welcome to Friday’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 the US dollar is being marked down as demand for precious metal hedges rises.

But first in the US there were 260,000 initial jobless claims last week, down -71,000 from the prior week and a marginally smaller change that the -73,000 change seasonal factors would have expected. There are now 2.21 mln people on these benefits, marginally less than the 2.24 mln a year ago. Two years ago, pre-Trump, there were 1.75 mln people on these benefits.

US real personal income rose +1.0% in November from the same month a year ago. On this inflation-adjusted basis it has been flat since April 2025. But real personal consumption expenditures rose +2.6%. On an inflation-adjusted basis this is the same pace of rise that started in April 2021. It has been driven recently by services and non-durable goods. While the PCE data is still within the Fed's inflation band, the income drag will be worrying policymakers. The spending rise can't be maintained.

The latest regional Fed factory survey, this one from the Kansas City Fed, shows no improvement from its dour base. It is still negative.

Malaysia's central bank reviewed its monetary policy and related policy rate overnight and made no change to its 2.75% level. They have a strong economic expansion underway, and inflation is low.

Japan’s exports rose +5.1% in December from the same month a year ago, the fourth monthly increase and reaching a record value. As good as that was, analysts had expected a rise of +6.1%. Imports climbed +5.3% on the same basis, the fastest pace in 11 months and much faster than November’s +1.3% rise.

The EU's consumer sentiment survey for January was marginally better (less worse) than for December - again. This continues the slow grinding improvement from its depths in September 2022 and halving that negative level. But it is still negative at double the negative pre-pandemic. Still it is on an improved trajectory and that is in sharp contrast to the US where the similar UofM survey is now deeply negative with a recent deterioration and half the level it was pre-pandemic

In Australia, their labour market performed well in December. Employment increased by +65,000 in the month to 14.65 mln, with full time employment up +54,800 and part-time employment up +10,400. Hours worked rose. As a consequence their jobless rate fell to 4.1%, well below the prior 4.3% and the expected 4.4%. This probably ends any chance of a rate cut early February and brings forward the chance of a rate hike in 2026. Everything now depends on next week's CPI outcome where there is upside risk to November's 3.4% CPI rate now.

Staying in Australia, job ad portal Seek is saying their platform shows job ads dropped -1.2% in December from November, and are down -3.5% from the same month a year ago. Applications per job ad fell -0.3% in December, "demonstrating a slightly sharper year-end decline in candidate activity than usual".

And Australian unicorn Airwallex is to be investigated by the money laundering regulator AUSTRAC. They suspect "serious non-compliance" by the global payments platform, specialising in moving money internationally for dodgy clients.

And we should probably note that the Trump Administration has advanced its role in granting licenses to mine the seabed in international waters. It is currently mapping resources off Samoa, and it has granted its first license to mine in international water to a US miner. The US only recognises a 12 mile country claim, so vast areas are now open to grant permits for their firms to mine. There is potential trouble ahead on jurisdictional issues.

Global container freight rates fell -10% last week from the prior week to be -43% below year-ago levels. Bulk cargo freight rates rose +16% in the past week to be double year-ago levels.

The UST 10yr yield is now just on 4.25%, down -3 bps from this time yesterday.

The price of gold will start today at US$4909/oz, and up another +US$66 from yesterday and a new record again. Silver is up +US$2.50/oz at US$96/oz and also a record high.

American oil prices are down -US$1 from yesterday at just on US$59.50/bbl, while the international Brent price is now just under US$64/bbl.

The Kiwi dollar is firmer from yesterday, up +50 bps to 59 USc as the USD is devalued in financial markets. Against the Aussie we are little-changed at 86.4 AUc. Against the euro we are up +30 bps at just on 50.3 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today just on 62.9, and up +40 bps from yesterday and its highest since late September.

The bitcoin price starts today at US$89,026 and up +1.2% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modest at just on +/- 1.7%.

Join us later this morning when we will report the New Zealand Q4-2025 CPI result, which could set the scene for the RBNZ decisions in 2026, the next one on February 18, 2026. Markets expect a 3.0% CPI rate, right at the top end of the central bank's policy comfort level.

You can get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.

Kia ora. I'm David Chaston and we’ll do this again on Monday.

...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
World Business Report by BBC World Service

World Business Report

307 Listeners

NZ Tech Podcast by Paul Spain

NZ Tech Podcast

4 Listeners

Gone By Lunchtime by The Spinoff

Gone By Lunchtime

22 Listeners

NZ Wine Podcast - New Zealand Wine Stories by Podcasts NZ / Boris Lamont

NZ Wine Podcast - New Zealand Wine Stories

2 Listeners

Social Media Strategy Podcast - Pauline Stockhausen by WorldPodcasts.com / Gorilla Voice Media

Social Media Strategy Podcast - Pauline Stockhausen

13 Listeners

The Mike Hosking Breakfast by Newstalk ZB

The Mike Hosking Breakfast

45 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

Equity Mates Investing Podcast by Equity Mates Media

Equity Mates Investing Podcast

50 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

11 Listeners

The Front Page by NZ Herald

The Front Page

15 Listeners

The Detail by RNZ

The Detail

35 Listeners

ASB Investment Podcast by ASB Bank

ASB Investment Podcast

1 Listeners

The Property Academy Podcast by Opes Partners

The Property Academy Podcast

26 Listeners

The NZ Property Market Podcast by Cotality NZ

The NZ Property Market Podcast

4 Listeners

This Climate Business by Podcasts NZ / Vincent Heeringa

This Climate Business

1 Listeners

A Bit of Optimism by Simon Sinek

A Bit of Optimism

2,180 Listeners

Kiwi Foodcast by Podcasts NZ / Gorilla Voice Media

Kiwi Foodcast

0 Listeners

Keep The Change by nextAdvisory

Keep The Change

15 Listeners

Unhedged by Financial Times & Pushkin Industries

Unhedged

195 Listeners

5 in 5 with ANZ by ANZ

5 in 5 with ANZ

2 Listeners

Making Cents by Frances Cook

Making Cents

13 Listeners