Brexit and a Vote of No Confidence Keep the GBP Front and Center
With the Brexit deal sunk and Theresa May needing to head back to Brussels, there’s just a vote of no confidence to survive later today… · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session was on the heavier side this morning, with key stats including electronic card retail sales figures out of New Zealand, consumer confidence numbers out of Australia and machinery order figures out of Japan.

For the Kiwi Dollar, electronic card retail sales slumped by 2.3% in December, month-on-month, falling beyond a forecasted 0.4% decline, following a revised 0.5% fall in November. According to NZ Stats

  • Spending fell in four of the six retail sectors. The largest decline was recorded in the durable goods industry, down 4.4% (NZ$58m), followed by the fuel industry, which fell by 8% (NZ$50m).

  • The slide in durable goods was the largest since October 2010.

  • Declines were also seen in the sales of clothes and shoes, down 2.1%.

  • Spending on hospitality was flat, while sales of supermarket food and drink rise by 0.6%.

  • Core retail spending, excluding vehicle related industries, fell by 1.5%, reversing a 0.3% rise in November.

  • Quarter-on-quarter, retail card spending was down 0.2% in the 4th quarter, partially offsetting a 2.1% rise recorded in the 3rd.

  • For the quarter, spending rose in four of the six retail sectors, the fuel industry seeing the largest move, down 4.7% (NZ$92m). Offsetting the decline was a 1% (NZ$62m) rise in the sales of food and liquor.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.68161 to $0.68160 upon release of the figures, before easing to $0.6810 at the time of writing, a loss of 0.10% for the session.

For the Aussie Dollar, the Westpac Consumer Sentiment Index fell by 4.7% to 99.6 in January, reversing December’s 0.1% rise with interest.

  • The fall below 100, which reflects pessimists outnumber optimists, was the first since November 2017.

  • Year-on-year, the Index was down 5.3%.

  • The decline was attributed to a number of factors, including:

    • A continued decline in house prices.

    • Weaker than expected growth numbers.

    • The ongoing trade war.

    • Political uncertainty.

  • Looking at the sub-indexes:

    • The economic outlook, next 12-months slid by 7.8%, the biggest fall since Sep-15.

    • The economic outlook, next 5-years fell by 5.9%.

    • Finances vs a year ago fell by 5.9%, while finances next 12-months fell by 3.1%.

    • The time to buy a major household item sub-index fell by 1.3%.

    • On the labour market front, the Unemployment Expectations Index rose by 2.2% to 123.6, pointing to job less fears sitting well below a long run average of 130.

    • On the housing front, the time to by a dwelling index rose by 4.1% to a 4-year high, while the House Price Expectations Index fell by 4.1% to 95.9, the weakest level since records began back in May-09.