In This Article:
Earlier in the Day:
The economic calendar was on the busier side once more through the Asian session this morning.
For the Kiwi Dollar
Building consents fell by 1.3% in July, month-on-month, following on from a 4% fall in June. According to NZ Stats,
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While consents were down for a 2nd consecutive month, the declines came off the back of a 15% jump in May.
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Year-on-year, building consents rose by 8% in July.
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The number of new homes consented hit 35,472 in the year ended July 2019. This was reportedly the most consented in a year since the mid-’70s.
The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.63110 to $0.63122 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Kiwi Dollar was down by 0.17% to $0.6300.
For the Japanese Yen
Tokyo’s core annual rate of inflation eased from 0.9% to 0.7% in August, which was softer than a forecast of 0.8%. According to consumer price figures released by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication,
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Prices for transportation and communication continued to drag, with a 0.9% decline, with prices for medical care falling by 0.1%.
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Prices for housing rose by just 0.4%, while prices for education rose by 0.7%.
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Fuel, light and water charges rose by 1.7%. While softer than a 2.8% rise in July, continued to provide support.
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Support also came from culture and recreation (+1.3%), clothes & footwear (+1.2%), and furniture & utensils (+3.4%).
The Japanese Yen moved from ¥106.513 to ¥106.508 upon release of the figures, which preceded retail sales and industrial production numbers.
Retail sales slid by 2% in July, year-on-year, according to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. In June, retail sales had risen by 0.5%.
Industrial production rose by 1.3% in July, month-on-month, according to prelim figures. Forecasts were for a 0.3% rise. In June, production had fallen by 3.3%
According to prelim figures released by Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry,
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Industries that mainly contributed to the increase were:
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Motor vehicles
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Chemicals (excl. inorganic, organic chemicals, and medicine)
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Pulp, paper and paper products.
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Industries that mainly contributed to a decreased were:
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Inorganic and organic chemicals.
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Petroleum and coal products.
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Electrical machinery, and information and communication electronics.
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Forecasts are for industrial production to fall by 1.6% in September.
The Japanese Yen moved from ¥106.480 to ¥106.489 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Japanese Yen was up by 0.09% to ¥106.42 against the U.S Dollar.
For the Aussie Dollar
Building approvals tumbled by 9.7% in July, month-on-month, following a 1.2% decline in June. Economists had forecast no change.