Financial Market Review for April 30, 2018 Economic data through the Asian session this morning was on the lighter side, but certainly not lacking influence, with key stats including April’s private sector PMI figures out of China, business confidence numbers out of New Zealand and new home sales and private sector credit figures out of Australia. For the Kiwi Dollar, According to the ANZ Business Confidence survey, confidence eased in April, with a net 23.4% of businesses being pessimistic about the year ahead, down 3 points from March, with all sectors in the red. While the services sector was the least pessimistic, the agriculture sector was the most, while managing to see some improvement from March. The construction sector saw the greatest deterioration, falling from 33 to 9.1, the lowest level since 2008. In addition to confidence taking a hit, own activity also slid, with employment indicators mixed and expected profitability sliding to the lowest level since 2009. The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.70868 to $0.70764 upon release of the figures, with both business and consumer confidence now having softened. For the Aussie Dollar, new home sales fell by 2% in March, following February’s 0.7% decline to make it 3 consecutive months of decline, the declines coinciding with tighter lending restrictions. The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.75761 to $0.75723 upon release of the figures, which coincided with the release of China’s private sector PMI numbers. Out of China, April’s manufacturing PMI eased from 51.5 to 51.4, coming in ahead of a forecasted 51.3, while the service sector PMI rose from 54.6 to 54.8. While the manufacturing PMI numbers was marginally softer, the continued expansion in the sector amidst the current trade spat between the U.S and China and Beijing’s attempts to curb debt and address pollution issues will have been taken as a positive, the only real concern in the numbers being softer exports in April. While new home sales slipped in March, private sector credit increased by 0.5%, coming in ahead of a forecasted 0.4% rise, following February’s 0.4% increase. Annual credit growth continues its downward trend, with tighter credit conditions weighing on investor housing credit, while business credit picked up, supporting the rise in March. The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.75781 to $0.75706 upon release of the figures, as focus now shifts to the RBA’s interest rate decision and release of the rate statement tomorrow, disappointing inflation figures for the 1st quarter likely to leave the RBA in a holding pattern for the foreseeable future. The dovish policy outlook left the Aussie Dollar down 0.25% to $0.7562 at the time of writing, the Kiwi Dollar doing somewhat better, down just 0.08% to $0.7079.
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