FINANCIAL MARKET REVIEW FOR JUL 31, 2018
Economic data released through the Asian session was on the heavier side this morning, with key stats including building consent and business confidence figures out of NZ, employment and industrial production numbers out of Japan, new home sales, building approvals and private sector credit figures out of Australia and private sector PMI numbers out of China. On top of the stats is the BoJ’s heavily anticipated monetary policy decision due shortly and the press conference scheduled for later this morning. For the Kiwi Dollar , Building consents slumped by 7.6% in June, more than reversing May’s downwardly revised 6.9% increase. The Kiwi Dollar moved from 0.68283 to $0.68264 upon release of the figures. The ANZ Business Confidence Index slumped in July to levels not seen since May 2008, with a net 45% of those surveyed expecting general business conditions to deteriorate in the year ahead, following 39% in June. Looking at the sub-indexes: A net 1% of firms are expecting to lift investment, down 3 points. Employment intentions rose by 1 point to +2%, supported by the services sector, with other sectors being negative. Profit expectations fell by 4 pints to -16.8%, with every sector in the red, retail the weakest at -28%. A net 37% of businesses expect it to be tougher to get credit. The Kiwi Dollar moved from 0.6309 to $0.68173 upon release of the figures, before rising to $0.6821 at the time of writing, down 0.03% for the session. For the Japanese Yen, The June jobs / applications ratio stood at 1.62 in June, coming in ahead of a forecasted and May 1.60, while the unemployment rate rose from 2.2% to 2.4%, rising above a forecasted 2.3% The Japanese Yen moved from ¥111.04 to ¥111.023 against the Dollar upon release of the figures Industrial Production slumped by 2.1% in June, according to prelim figures, which was far worse than a forecasted 0.3% fall, following May’s 0.2% decline. Industries that contributed to the decline were chemicals (excl. drugs); petroleum and coal products and fabricated metals. Industries seeing a pickup in output included electronic parts and devices, iron and steel and transport equipment. The Japanese Yen moved from ¥110.998 to ¥110.937 against the Dollar upon release of the figures, before easing to ¥111.04 to leave the Yen flat ahead of the BoJ policy decision.
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