NZ Trade Deficit Another Record, with Focus Shifting to Draghi and the EUR
Oil prices take NZ imports to the highest on record, with focus shifting to Draghi and the ECB Press Conference, a myriad of unknowns to consider. · FX Empire

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

Economic data released through the Asian session this morning was limited to September trade data out of New Zealand, leaving the markets to pick up the pieces from the sell-off in the U.S equity markets, as risk sentiment shifted once more over concerns of an economic slowdown, with the Eurozone’s private sector prelim October PMI numbers having provided some troubling numbers on Wednesday.

For the Kiwi Dollar, the September trade deficit hit a new monthly trade deficit record, with the monthly deficit widening from a revised NZ$1,470m to NZ$1,560m, according to NZ Stats.

  • Record imports led to the largest ever goods trade deficit, with September’s record the 2nd in a row, following August’s widening.

  • Imports rose by 19% (NZ$930m) compared with the same month last year, to hit NZ$5.9bn, the highest value for total imports on record.

  • The jump in imports was attributed to a rise in petroleum and products imports, which rose by 87% (NZ$366m) from September last year, with crude oil leading the way, up NZ$278m followed by fuels, which increased by NZ$86m.

  • Imports of aircraft also contributed, rising by NZ$266m.

  • Exports rose by 14% (NZ$536m) to reach $4.3bn, a 118% (NZ$188m) increase in the export of Kiwi fruits the key contributor, with both higher volumes and prices driving the increase.

  • Year-on-year, the trade deficit widened from a revised NZ$4,790m to NZ$5,190m.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.65242 to $0.65236 upon release of the figures, before easing to $0.6523 at the time of writing, down 0.09% for the session.

Elsewhere, the Aussie Dollar was on a tear, up 0.2% to $0.7074, while the Japanese Yen stood at ¥111.96 against the U.S Dollar at the time of writing, a gain of 0.27% for the session.

In the equity markets, there were no surprises early on, the Nikkei tumbling by 3.33% at the time of writing, with the ASX200 and Hang Seng not far behind, down by 2.25% and by 1.91% respectively, the late sell-off in the U.S spilling over to the Asian session, with mining stocks amongst the biggest losers on the ASX200 early on, while oil and tech stocks were amongst the biggest sliders on the Hang Seng.

The Day Ahead:

For the EUR, following some quite dire prelim PMI numbers out of the Eurozone on Wednesday, economic data scheduled for release this morning includes consumer and business confidence numbers out of Germany and jobseeker figures out of France.

While we will expect both the consumer and business confidence numbers out of Germany to provide some direction for the EUR, focus will be on today’s ECB monetary policy decision and the all-important Draghi press conference, where the EUR is likely to find plenty of price action.