After getting a bath over two weeks since the budget, and being slapped in the face with the Ford operations closure announcement on Thursday, the mood around the Australian dollar is sensitive. Deus Forex Machina and Gunnamatta chewed over the backdrop and the outlook, with a diversion to talk about JPY and the USD, before coming back to look at potential for an AUD bounce, key support levels, and cogitating over how the RBA may relate the upcoming mining capex data to it's next move.
Join the Forum discussion on this... MB Radio: How far will the Australian dollar fall?
Posted by Gunnamatta in Australian Dollar, Podcasts on May 23, 2013 | 3 comments
After getting a bath over two weeks since the budget, and being slapped in the face with the Ford operations closure announcement on Thursday, the mood around the Australian dollar is sensitive. Deus Forex Machina and Gunnamatta chewed over the backdrop and the outlook, with a diversion to talk about JPY and the USD, before coming back to look at potential for an AUD bounce, key support levels, and cogitating over how the RBA may relate the upcoming mining capex data to it's next move.
Join the Forum discussion on this...
ASX at the close
Posted by Chris Weston in Australian Shares on May 23, 2013 | 6 comments
Volatility is in full force today and nowhere more so than Japan. It doesn’t matter that asset class, traders are out to play today in a big way, with the Nikkei trading in a 1459 point or 9.2% range! It’s been an incredible move, and anyone wanting to see a full-scale liquidation of a hugely over crowded trade will use this as textbook. Japanese government bonds initially pushed up to 1% on the open, but that was a bit too much and buyers have stepped in, although it has hardly been convincing. Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga detailed that the BoJ has done a good job in...
IMF recommends taxes on vacant UK land
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Global Housing on May 23, 2013 | 15 comments
By Leith van Onselen
Earlier this month, I posted an article arguing strongly that Australia's state and territory governments should look to replace stamp duties on property transfers with a broad-based land values tax, levied on all properties:
Broad-based land value taxes (LVT) would... assist in the provision of new housing via two channels. First, an LVT would help make infrastructure investments self-funding for governments, since any land value uplift brought about through increased infrastructure investment (e.g. new roads, trains, etc) would be partly captured by the government via...
RP Data: Rental market chugging along
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Australian Property on May 23, 2013 | 24 comments
By Leith van Onselen
RP Data has today released a short note (below) on the state of the nation's rental markets, which it notes are posting solid (but unspectacular) gains, with both rents and rental yields rising:
Across Australia’s capital cities over the past 12 months to April 2013, rental rates have increased by 3.5 per cent for houses and 3.3 per cent for units. While according to Mr Kusher this is a relatively measured rate of growth, it remains higher than inflation. Across the combined capital cities, median weekly rents are recorded at $474/week for houses and $440/week for...
Feeble AiG congratulates Ford
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian Economy on May 23, 2013 | 36 comments
The hapless AiG, the most ineffectual lobby in Australia, has responded to the Ford closure today thusly:
"Today’s announcement by Ford that it will end production at its Broadmeadow and Geelong plants in 2016 is a watershed moment in Australian manufacturing," Ai Group Chief Executive, Innes Willox, said today.
"The loss of 1200 jobs over the next three years is deeply concerning as are the implications for the many businesses and employees linked into Ford Australia’s assembly operations in Victoria. We welcome any support that can be given to those employees impacted both directly and...
China Flash PMI back into recession
Posted by Houses and Holes in China Economy on May 23, 2013 | 3 comments
China's May Flash PMI is out and the bad news keeps rolling with it sliding back into recessionary territory at 49.6 versus expected of 50.4. As you can see the internals are pretty lousy:
Not disastrous but not great either.
There was some interesting action in the dollar. It dropped 30 pips a minute before the release suggesting someone had an inside run, then rallied half of that back afterwards. Currently at 96.36 and still looking...
McKibbin: US gas to hit Australia
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian LNG on May 23, 2013 | 9 comments
What is it, national MB day today? From the AFR, Warwick McKibbin is out with another warning that will be familiar to readers:
Professor McKibbin said the expected massive expansion of shale gas in the US would reduce the price of world gas prices from 2016 onwards.
This would cause manufacturers and other energy-intensive industries to switch to gas-fired power from coal-fired power and hurt Australia’s coal prices and export volumes.
“From Australia’s point of view this shock in the US reduces Australia’s terms of trade by about 8 per cent over the next couple of years,”...
Unemployment expectations jump in April
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian Economy on May 23, 2013 | 1 comment
The Westpac monthly consumer expectations pack is out and shows well anchored inflation expectations:
But a big jump in unemployment expectations:
Still not quite a tend break but worrying nonetheless.
Expectations Bulletin Pack May...
Ford confirms closure
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian Economy on May 23, 2013 | 94 comments
From the SMH:
Ford Motor will close its local car manufacturing plants in 2016 after almost nine decades in the country.
Ford, the smallest of the country’s three manufacturers after Toyota and Holden, will shut its assembly plant at Broadmeadows in northern Melbourne and an engine plant in Geelong to the west of the city, the company announced this morning.
About 1200 jobs will be cut as a result of the closures, the company said this morning.
...‘‘Australian manufacturing can’t keep its head above water,’’ said Katrina Ell, an economist at Moody’s Analytics in Sydney....
Bottom departs Australian dollar
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian dollar on May 23, 2013 | 23 comments
In one promising development today, the arse is departing from the Australian dollar, currently trading down towards 96.5 cents. First it was Bernanke and then Ford in the two step:
On a longer time frame the key levels are last year's low at 95.70/80 and then huge at 94 cents (h/t Deus Forex Machina):
Having refused to keep the dollar down and successfully hollowed out the economy in the process, I can't wait to see the heroes at the RBA buying...
The decade of deficits
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Australian budget on May 23, 2013 | 6 comments
By Leith van Onselen
The Australian newspaper today contains some interesting discussion on the state of Federal Government budget finances, which it argues are likely to remain in deficit for a prolonged period of time following reckless tax and spending decisions undertaken by both the formal Howard Government and the current Labor Government, which has left the budget in structural deficit:
Ringing the alarm on fiscal policy barely one week after the federal budget, two independent reports from the Parliamentary Budget Office and the federal Treasury reveal a sharp decline in the structure...
Goldman sees structurally weak mortgage growth
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian Property on May 23, 2013 | 0 comments
Goldman Sachs is out with a note this morning forecasting structurally weak mortgage growth:
While we expect lower interest rates to stimulate mortgage credit growth in the near term, we believe investors should expect structurally lower growth to continue in the medium/ long term.
Mortgage credit growth helped in the near term by lower rates …
After 200 bp of cash rate cuts over the past 18 months, the more recent tick up in housing finance approvals does suggest the recovery in mortgage credit growth is taking hold.
Indeed, we note that the number of 12-month rolling housing approvals...
BHP to pump iron ore come what may
Posted by Houses and Holes in Commodities, Iron ore price on May 23, 2013 | 9 comments
BHP held an investors round table yesterday and it produced a few interesting iron ore snippets. From Citi:
WA Iron Ore is on track to deliver 220mtpa by mid-14, with an unapproved US$1b expansion of Jimblebar likely to take that to 240mtpa. To reach 300mtpa an additional mining hub, in-load capacity and berths in Port Hedland will be required, which given forecasts for building iron ore surpluses and calls from shareholders for capital discipline and increased returns could increasingly come under pressure in our view. A decision on whether to push ahead on Jansen will be required in the next few...
Ford to shut down in Australia
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian Economy on May 23, 2013 | 106 comments
From the AFR (and through my Geelong rumour mill):
Ford Australia is expected to announce on Thursday that it will shut its car plants in Melbourne and Geelong in 2016, causing the loss of about 2000 jobs.
The company has scheduled a press conference for 10.45am at its assembly plant at Broadmeadows in Melbourne’s northern suburbs.
From the SMH:
A statement from acting Industry Minister Craig Emerson has just been sent out:
"The Government is aware of reports that Ford is making a significant announcement about the future of its manufacturing operations.
"In these situations our top...
Macro Morning: Australian dollar breaches 97 cents
Posted by Deus Forex Machina in Australian dollar on May 23, 2013 | 6 comments
There was little inconvenient truth in Ben Bernanke's speech and then questions last night that has sent US 10 years yields 11 basis points higher to 2.03% , the S&P and Dow down 0.85% and 0.52% respectively and contributed to a wild old night on FX markets.
In his prepared remarks Bernanke said that a premature tightening could endanger the recovery which eased fears about the so-called "taper" which helped drive the S&P up to an intraday high of 1687 before closing down at 1655. Euro rallied to a high of 1.2997 at this time, while the Aussie was 0.9827 before crashing to trade under...
The Fed plans its taper
Posted by Houses and Holes in US Economy on May 23, 2013 | 7 comments
The FOMC Minutes overnight showed a front-of-mind intent to plan its exit from QE:
After the policy vote, participants began a review of the exit strategy principles that were published in the minutes of the Committee's June 2011 meeting. Those principles, which the Committee issued to clarify how it intended to normalize the stance and conduct of monetary policy when doing so eventually became appropriate, included broad principles along with some details about the timing and sequence of specific steps the Committee expected to take. The participants' discussion touched on various aspects of the...
OECD warns Australia to join currency war
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian dollar on May 23, 2013 | 10 comments
Senior Australian economist Adrian Blundell-Wignall, special adviser to the OECD's secretary-general, said yesterday that:
"Australia is in a very unfortunate position...Having done the right thing, having no capital controls, Australia is now facing the whole avalanche of world investors seeking out Australian assets...the yen had been strong not because interest rates there (in Japan) were high, but because it was one of the countries that wouldn't do anything to push its exchange rate down".
Quantitative easing had created a gigantic bubble in global bond markets, whose bursting would cause...
Home renovations to post modest recovery?
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Australian Property on May 23, 2013 | 2 comments
By Leith van Onselen
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has released a new report (below) examining the state of the home renovation market, where activity has declined sharply over the past 18 months (see next chart).
The reasons for the declining renovation activity are as follows, according to the HIA:
One of the major shifts experienced in Australia’s economic environment since the GFC has been heightened consumer caution. This is demonstrated by the protracted weak consumer confidence measures and also the increased household savings rate – now at around 11 per cent, compared...
The Great Property Bubble of China
Posted by Unconventional Economist in China Economy on May 23, 2013 | 3 comments
By Leith van Onselen
The Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis recently released an interesting short report on China's epic housing bubble, which it warns could burst in the event that both household income growth and the savings rate start to decline, and/or capital controls in China begin to relax, removing housing's preferred status as a store of wealth (h/t Bernard Hickey at Interest.co.nz):
Housing and land prices in China have increased continuously and dramatically for the past two decades. In fact, housing price growth has significantly outstripped income growth. Current housing prices...
Joe Hockey ignores budget truths
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Australian budget on May 23, 2013 | 30 comments
By Leith van Onselen
Yesterday, Shadow Treasurer, Joe Hockey, delivered his budget reply speech to the National Press Club (below), which contained some spurious assertions about the causes of recent budget deficits, whilst ignoring the former Howard Government's role in creating the current structural budget deficit. Let's take a look.
The Government’s sixth budget fundamentally lacks integrity. Like everything else, they have over promised and under delivered.
Let me give you five reasons why you can’t believe the Budget promises.
Firstly, they have broken the most solemn promise...
Ineptitude then…
Posted by Houses and Holes in Australian business media on May 23, 2013 | 17 comments
So, the business media did get around to reporting yesterday's awful BREE predictions for the mining bust, late in the evening at both (I'd asked earlier in the day why they had not covered the story).
The coverage itself tells you all you need to know.
At BS Stephen Batholomeusz does a creditable job:
A large part of that is due to the inability of resource company managements to control costs in the race to get resources into production and within a labour and equipment-constrained environment. The Australian dollar has played a part and the relative lack of flexibility and mobility within...
Daily iron ore price update (Deutsche bear)
Posted by Houses and Holes in Commodities, Iron ore price on May 23, 2013 | 0 comments
Find below the iron ore price table for May 22, 2013:
In news today, Deutsche is out with a new report predicting another 8% drop in spot. From Businessweek:
Steel prices that have been pressuring Chinese mills are stabilizing as facilities shut down due to power shortages in Hebei province, and more will close for routine maintenance and to draw down surplus steel inventories, Deutsche Bank said.
“There remains some life in the market yet despite the operating pressures facing Chinese steel mills,” Deutsche Bank said in the report. “We expect that more shutdowns will occur over the...
Links 23 May 2013
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Links on May 23, 2013 | 5 comments
Global Macro/Markets:
Lessons at the Zero Bound: The Japanese and U.S. Experience - Federal Reserve Bank of New York - New York Fed
Low yields and high uncertainty - businesstimes.com.sg
Headed for euphoria - Sober Look
Market Insight: Central bankers turn deaf ear on balance sheets - Financial Times
North America:
How Rail is Reshaping America’s Energy System - cmegroup.com
Ford adds production in North America to meet new car demand - Reuters
US farmland faces asset bubble test - Financial Times
Europe:
ECB: Euro area balance of payments in March 2013 - European...
ASX at the close
Posted by Chris Weston in Australian Shares on May 22, 2013 | 1 comment
It’s all about Ben Bernanke and we thoroughly expect him to align his narrative with that of his compatriot in the core of the Fed, Bill Dudley. The market will always pay close attention to Dudley, Yellen and Bernanke as they are permanent members and effectively have the last say. Bill Dudley was clearly dovish yesterday, and we thought it interesting that he compared the Fed to the BoJ through the years, suggesting the Fed shouldn’t do too little. Importantly, Dudley said he wasn’t sure which way the future direction of asset purchases will go – either up or down. Of course this will be...
Despite ‘Abenomic’ growth, Japan needs reform
Posted by Unconventional Economist in Global Macro on May 22, 2013 | 8 comments
Cross-posted from The Conversation
Amid the doom and gloom of recent world economic reports, Japan has provided a rare source of good news. In the first quarter of the year, its economy grew by 0.9%, indicating an annual growth rate of 3.5%. This is considerably higher than most comparable nations; the US is growing, but at a lower rate, and much of Europe is still in recession.
Japanese growth is particularly welcome as the country’s economy has stagnated for much of the past two decades. Confidence is in short supply, and investment and consumption are lacking. Even zero interest rates...


















