No Surprises as the BoJ Holds, Focus now Shifting to Inflation and the GBP
Impressive 2nd GDP numbers drive the Kiwi, with Brexit and retail sales numbers putting the Pound in the spotlight. · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session was on the heavier side this morning, with stats including 2nd quarter current account and 3rd quarter consumer sentiment figures out of New Zealand and August trade figures out of Japan. On the policy front, the BoJ also delivered its September interest rate decision and released its monetary policy statement ahead of the BoJ press conference scheduled for later this morning.

For the Kiwi Dollar:

The Westpac Consumer Sentiment Index fell from 108.6 to 103.5 for the 3rd quarter, the index hitting a 6-year low, the decline coming off the back of the previous quarter’s 2.6 point fall.

  • The decline was attributed to rising fuel prices and a slowdown in the housing sector.

  • Expectations for their own circumstances in the year ahead were at the lowest level on record, outside of a recessionary period.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.65832 to $0.65849 upon release of the figures, a pullback in the U.S Dollar through the early morning masking the negative effects of the softer figure.

New Zealand’s current account deficit was also a negative for the Kiwi, the deficit widening from NZ$7.91bn to NZ$9.54bn, year-on-year, in the 2nd quarter, with a 1st quarter NZ$0.18bn surplus sliding to a NZ$1.62bn deficit, quarter-on-quarter, according to figures released by Stats NZ.

  • The June deficit was the widest since the 2nd quarter of 2009, a NZ$2.1bn increase in the primary income deficit singled out as the main contributor, reflecting net income outflows between NZ and the rest of the world.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.65908 to $0.65929 upon release of the figures, before easing to $0.6579 at the time of writing, down 0.06% for the morning.

For the Japanese Yen, the trade deficit widened from ¥232bn to ¥445bn in August, which was better than a forecasted widening to ¥468.7bn.

  • Year-on-year, exports increased by 6.6% in August, coming in ahead of a forecasted 5.6%, following a 3.9% rise in July.

  • Imports surged by 15.4% year-on-year, coming in ahead of a forecasted 14.9% and July 14.6% rise, driving the widening to the deficit.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥112.315 to ¥112.256 against the Dollar, upon release of the figures, the widening in the deficit coming as the U.S begins to eye trade terms with Japan

On the policy front, interest rates were left unchanged at -0.1%, which was in line with market expectations, with the Central Bank also maintaining its pledge to maintain 10-year government bond yields at around 0%.

While leaving policy unchanged, inflation continuing to be the bugbear of both the government and BoJ, optimism towards the economy was reflected in the monetary policy statement in spite of rising tensions towards a trade war.