Market Review for May 08, 2018

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FINANCIAL MARKET REVIEW FOR MAY 08, 2018

Economic data released through the Asian session this morning was on the heavier side and including March household spending figures out of Japan, Australia’s March retail sales numbers, April trade figures out of China and 2nd quarter inflation expectation numbers out of New Zealand. For the Japanese Yen, there was more bad news for Prime Minister Abe and the BoJ, with household spending taking an unexpected turn for the worse at the end of the 1st quarter. Month-on-month, spending fell by 0.1%, following February’s 1.5% slide, falling short of a forecasted 0.7% rise, while Year-on-year, spending fell by 0.7%, more than reversing February’s 0.1% rise and falling short of a forecasted 1.2% increase. Dear Mr.Benitez,

The weaker than expected year-on-year spending figures were attributed to an 18.1% fall in spending on housing, a 3.2% fall in spending on culture & recreation, with spending on food falling by 0.7%. Household incomes were down 3.8%, to leave disposable incomes down 2.7% year-on-year in March. In spite of lower disposable incomes, spending on education and furniture & household utensils saw the largest increases, up 9.9% and 9.4% respectively, with spending on medical care (6.8%) and clothing & footwear (4.4%) providing some support. The numbers certainly supported the BoJ’s decision to remove a target date to hit its 2% objective, all hopes now being on an uptick in spending in the 2nd quarter following this year’s Shunto. To make matters worse, a 2nd consecutive month of decline in household spending will weigh on GDP numbers, the Japanese economy expected to contract in the 1st quarter, bringing an end to 8 consecutive quarters of growth, its longest stretch of growth since the 80’s. The Japanese Yen moved from ¥109.099 to ¥109.009 against the Dollar upon release of the figures, before easing back to ¥109.08 at the time of writing, down just 0.01% for the morning. For the Aussie Dollar, retail sales were flat in March, falling short of a forecasted 0.2% increase, following February’s 0.6% rise. According to the ABS, a 0.7% rise in food retailing was offset by a fall in spending across all other sectors, with café, restaurants and takeaway seeing the largest fall in sales, down 0.8%, while other retailing (-0.6%), household goods retailing (-0.3%), department stores (-0.5%) and clothing, footwear and personal accessory retailing (-0.2%) also declined. For the 1st quarter, turnover rose by 0.2%, easing from a 4th quarter of last year 0.8% rise. The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.75217 to $0.74962 upon release of the figures, domestic consumption continuingly identified as a key risk to the Aussie economic outlook. Out of China, trade data impressed with China’s April USD balance jumping from a $4.98bn deficit to a $28.78bn surplus, widening beyond a forecasted $27.50bn surplus. Exports rose by 12.9% year-on-year, coming in ahead of a forecasted 6.3% rise, following March’s 2.7% fall.

vinsonfinancial.com | (+357) 250-288-6163 | general@vinsonfinancials.com


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