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Economic Data, Brexit and U.S Politics Keep the Majors in Focus

Earlier in the Day:

It was a particularly busy day on the economic calendar through the Asian session this morning.

New Zealand building consents and business confidence numbers, and Japan retail sales and industrial production figures provided early direction.

Later in the session, September private sector PMI numbers out of China and Australia August private sector credit figures also influenced.

Outside of the numbers, geopolitical risk continued to be a test for the majors. Negative sentiment towards trade tested risk sentiment early on.

For the Kiwi Dollar

Building consents rose by 0.8% in August, following a 1.3% decline in July. Economists had forecast a 2.7% fall.

According to NZ Stats,

  • Consents for stand-alone houses fell by 1.5%.

  • In the year ended August 2019, the number of new dwellings consented rose by 8.8%.

  • By region, an 11% jump in consents in Auckland drove the headline number.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.62880 to $0.62902 upon release of the figures that preceded Business confidence figures later in the morning.

Business Confidence deteriorated further in September. The ANZ Business Confidence Index fell from -52.30 to 53.50.

According to the latest ANZ Report,

  • Investment intentions fell by 5 points to -9, with profit expectations falling by 5 points to a net 25% of respondents expecting profitability to decline.

  • Employment intentions eked out a 1 point gain to a net 8% of firms intending to reduce employment.

  • Cost pressures fell by 2 points to +47, with inflation expectations falling from 1.70% to 1.63%. Price intentions fell by 2 points to a net 18% of firms expecting to raise prices.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.62856 to $0.62812 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Kiwi Dollar was down by 0.40% to $0.6271.

For the Japanese Yen

Industrial production fell by 1.2% in August, according to prelim figures, following a 1.3% rise in July. Economists had forecasted a 0.5% decline.

According to finalized figures released by the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry,

  • Industries that mainly contributed to the decrease, in order, were

    • Iron, steel and non-ferrous metals.

    • Production machinery.

    • Motor vehicles.

  • Industries that mainly contributed to the increase, in order, were

    • Electronic parts and devices.

    • Chemicals (excl. inorganic, organic chemicals, and medicine).

    • Inorganic and organic chemicals.

  • For September, industrial production is projected to rise by 1.9%, whilst forecasted to fall by 0.5% in October.

    • An increase in the production of production machinery, electrical machinery and information and communication electronics equipment and ‘others’ are forecasted to provide support in September.

    • A decrease in the production of transport equipment, electrical machinery and information and communication electronics equipment, and electronics parts and devices are forecasted to weigh on production in October.