The Aussie and Kiwi Dollar Rally as U.S Treasury Yields Ease Back
Economic data out of Asia give the Aussie and Kiwi Dollars some respite early in the day, while geo-political risk remains the key area of focus. · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session this morning included September electronic card retail sales figures out of New Zealand, October consumer sentiment figures out of Australia and August machinery orders out of Japan.

For the Kiwi Dollar, electronic card retail sales rose by 1.1% in September, following an upwardly revised 1.1% rise in August, according to Stats NZ.

  • Spending in the retail industries rose by 1.1%, with spending in the core retail industries also rising by 1.1%.

  • By industry, spending on consumables rose by 1%, on apparel by 0.9%, on durables and vehicles (excl. fuel) both by 0.8%, with 0.4% rises in spending on hospitality and on fuel.

  • Year-on-year, electronic card retail sales rose by 5.7%, easing back from a 6.3% rise in August.

  • For the 3rd quarter (q/q), spending in the retail industries rose by 2.3% and by 2.1% in the core retail industries.

  • In the 3rd quarter, the largest contributions to spending came from fuel (+3.4%), consumables (+2.4%), while spending on apparel dragged, with just a 0.1% rise.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.64713 to $0.64760 upon release of the figures, before rising to $0.6487 at the time of writing, up 0.20% for the session.

For the Aussie Dollar, the Westpac Consumer Sentiment rose by 1% to 101.5 in October, the rise partially reversing September’s 3% slide to 100.5.

  • Negative sentiment towards falling house prices, rising mortgage rates and rising petrol prices had offset the positive effects of a tax cut earlier in the year, leading to a 5.2% fall in confidence in August through September.

  • Support at the start of the 4th quarter came from solid economic growth, labour market conditions and a recovery in certain mining states.

Looking at the key sub-indexes:

  • Family finances v a year ago rose by 2.6% to 87.4, sitting just shy of a long-run average of 89.5.

  • Family finances next 12-months rose by 0.6% to 102.8, sitting well below a long-run average of 102.8.

  • Economic conditions over next 12-months rose by 2.3% to 102.5, holding well above the long-run average of 90.8.

  • Economic conditions over next 5-year fell by 0.3%, with time to buy a dwelling falling by 0.9% and the house price expectations index down 7.4%, the housing sub-indexes sitting well below their respective long-run averages.

  • The unemployment expectations index rose by 1.7% to 122.8, also sitting below its long run average of 130.1.

The Aussie Dollar moved from $0.71091 to $0.71152 upon release of the figures, holding steady at $0.7115 at the time of writing, up 0.17% for the session.