Morning Report
Today's economic developments and market movements.

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Key themes: It was a relatively calm session overnight in the context of recent developments.
US equities unwound an early gain to finish firmly in the red, but the appetite for risk was a little more upbeat in Europe.
US treasury yields pushed higher at the long end of the curve aided by a weak US 10-year auction.
The 2-10-year portion of the US yield curve steepened and is now almost fully dis-inverted, after briefly flipping positive in Monday’s volatility.
The US dollar firmed against a basket of major currencies. The Japanese Yen underperformed on comments from BoJ Deputy Governor Uchida yesterday, noting that the BoJ will not raise rates when financial and capital markets are unstable.
Share markets: US equities opened higher, carrying on an improvement in risk appetite from Asian trade and the start of London session. However, the mood quickly soured, with equities grinding lower throughout the day and extending the move lower as a weak US treasury auction dampened sentiment further. The S&P500 was down 0.8%, the Dow Jones and NASDAQ were also down 0.6% and 1.1%, respectively.
In contrast, European markets performed far better, continuing to partly reverse their recent slide. The Euro Stoxx 50 rose 2.0%, while the FTSE100 posted a 1.8% gain in London and the German DAX rose 1.5%.
Asian markets recouped some of their losses yesterday, led by the Hang Seng (Hong Kong), up 1.4% and Japan’s Nikkei, up 1.2%. The ASX200 closed 0.2% higher with all but materials and financials finishing stronger.
Interest rates: Weak demand for a $42bn sale of US 10-year Treasuries helped the 10-year bond yield gain 5 basis points to 3.94%. The recent slide in yields below 4% likely weighed on demand, while strong supply in higher-yielding corporate bonds also contributed to the soft auction demand.
The yield curve steepened slightly with the 2-year down 1 basis point to 3.96%. The 2-10-year portion of the yield curve is almost fully dis-inverted at just -2 basis points. Markets have fully priced in a September rate cut from the Fed and four cuts by December this year.
The BoJ’s Deputy Governor Uchida said the Bank “will not raise its policy interest rate when financial and capital markets are unstable”. A dovish signal and the first official communication following the BoJ’s recent hike. The Japanese 10-year bond yield fall 4 basis points to 0.89%.
Australian yields were lower in physical trade yesterday. Overnight, the 3-year futures yield rose 3 basis points to 3.68%, while the 10-year futures yield rose 5 basis points to 4.13%. Markets are pricing in the first RBA rate cut for February and another by May.
Foreign exchange: The US dollar gained for a second straight day. The DXY index rose from a low of 102.92 to a high of 103.37 before settling at around 103.2.
The Japanese yen reversed its recent momentum on comments from Deputy Governor Uchida ruling out interest rate hikes in the current volatile market environment. The USD/JPY rose from a low of 144.29 to a high of 147.90 before settling around 146.52.
The AUD/USD pair briefly reached a high of 0.6575 but couldn’t sustain the momentum, grinding lower to finish little changed at 0.6517.
Commodities: West Texas Intermediate oil futures gained 2.8% yesterday to US$75.48 per barrel as fears of escalating conflict in the Middle East continue to bubble away.
Copper futures continued to their decent lower falling 1.9% to US$8.663.51. The move lower supported by news that copper inventories at London Metal Exchange (LME) warehouses jumped to their highest level since 2019. Iron ore was also softer, easing 1.5% but holding above US$100.
Australia: There were no major economic data releases yesterday.
China: The trade balance disappointed expectations in July, narrowing from US$99.05bn to US$84.65bn. At roughly 2.5 times the average monthly surplus of 2019, this is still a very strong result. Behind the outcome, annual export growth slipped from 8.6% to 7.0% as import growth jumped from -2.3% to 7.2%. Reports suggest the latter was due to a pull-forward of industrial good imports.
New Zealand: The unemployment rate rose to 4.6% in the June quarter, slightly less than market predictions, but in line with the Reserve Bank’s most recent forecast. The unemployment rate is now at its highest level since March 2021.
The number of people employed rose by 0.4% for the quarter, beating expectations for a quarterly decline. This was accompanied by a pickup in the participation rate from 71.6% to 71.7%, the first increase in a year.
The Labour Cost Index (LCI) rose by 1.1% in the June quarter, lifting the annual growth rate from 4.1% to 4.2%. Driving the move was a 1.9% quarterly rise in the public sector which was affected by pay increases in the health and education sectors previously agreed and implemented in stages. The private sector measure rose by 0.9%. Overall, wage inflation is slowing but it remains above what would be consistent with the RBNZ’s inflation target.
United States: Consumer credit was much weaker than expected in June at $8.9bn. However, May’s outcome was revised significantly higher, from $11.4bn to $13.9bn. Under the weight of elevated interest rates and with inflation sapping discretionary spending power, appetite for consumer credit has declined materially over the past two years, the monthly data falling from a peak of $42bn mid-2022 to $8.9bn mid-2024.
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