First View - Fonterra delivers a Butter than expected payout
Fonterra delivers a Butter than expected payout. But petrol prices are hurting.
• We have released
our 2018-20 outlook. We are rather upbeat, but wary of the
risks.
• Fonterra lifted it’s 2018/19 payout forecast
to $7. If they are not profitable at $7, they’re not
viable.
• Petrol prices are already hurting, and
Aucklanders face another kick at the pump.
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Data wrap
Last week we released our NZ economic outlook
report. The outlook is fine and partly cloudy. The land of
the long white cloud is surrounded by low weather patterns.
Hopefully they dissipate. Our forecasts show an economy
growing a little above trend into next year. Slightly above
trend growth should lead to a slightly faster reduction in
spare capacity. The global backdrop is conducive to
strengthening price pressure, with solid demand. The missing
piece of the economic puzzle, inflation, should be found in
time. Once found, the RBNZ will begin to lift interest
rates. They will take their foot off the economic
accelerator and start normalising policy. So the message is
clear, don’t fear rampant inflation or rapidly rising
interest rates. But both will rise in coming years. This is
good news.
The good news also came in a butterful update from Fonterra. Fonterra put out a bullish first up forecast for the upcoming 2018/19 dairy season payout of $7.00/kgms. This comes on the back of recent rise in diary prices, aided by rising demand from China according to Fonterra. They also revised up their expectation of the current season payout by 20 cent to $6.75/kgms. The higher payouts are likely to be welcome news for dairy farmers that are presently facing some significant challenges. Not least the cattle disease Mycoplasma bovis. The Government is expected to announce later today if it will go ahead with full eradication (culling stock of affected farms) or move to a plan of long-term management of the disease. While production from cattle with the disease is still fine for human consumption, there are long-term economic costs of living with the disease.
There are signs that household spending growth is slowing. Retail sales volumes barely registered a rise over the March quarter, posing a downside risk to GDP growth. Petrol prices hit record highs in parts of the country. And net migration eased further in April, with annual net long-term arrivals falling to 67,000, down from the peak of around 74,000 in July last year. Long-term non-NZ citizen departures have picked up, as visas expire. Net migration still remains elevated by NZ history and continues to support GDP growth, just less than 2017.
Chart of
the week: Outlook is fine and partly cloudy
We
provide a suite of forecasts out two years. The highlights
in the first table, are detailed are in the last table.
Growth of around 2.9% yoy this year will hopefully be
followed by above trend growth of 3.5% yoy early next year.
Inflation will strengthen from 1.1%yoy today, to 2.1% yoy
this time next year. Stronger headline inflation, along with
hikes in the minimum wage rate, will enable a healthy lift
in wage inflation to 2.5% by the end of next year. All going
well, we expect the RBNZ to be in a position to lift
interest rates at the August MPS. The Kiwi interest rate
curve will move well in advance, and flatten aggressively
into RBNZ hikes. The Kiwi dollar is likely to remain on a
downward path, until the RBNZ moves to a hawkish bias (early
in 2019). The outlook is good, but not yet great. And there
are risks.
In terms of risks, most of these are foreign. Despite recent developments moving toward resolution on trade between the US and China, we aren’t there yet. Trade wars don’t end well. And New Zealand is now more exposed to an Asian slowdown than ever before. Another risk is the end of the great financial experiment. Central banks around the globe will move, slowly, to unwind ultra-accommodative monetary policy. Financial markets are likely to become more volatile, and may react adversely to the draining of stimulus. And then there are the banks. A tightening in financial market conditions may lead to a significant rise in bank funding costs.
Financial markets
Markets exhibited risk-off behaviour last week,
buying gold, yen, and high quality government bonds. This
move was in part due to the on-again, off-again, and
possibly on-again denuclearisation summit between the US and
North Korea. There remains a faint hope of that the summit
will go ahead following surprise talks between both North
and South Korean leaders over the weekend. But there is
something that feels a bit too good to be true about this
huge 180° turn in attitude from North Korea. Adding to
general risk aversion was heightened political uncertainty
in the Eurozone.
A cloud hangs over Italian politics, with the likely formation of a government consisting of two main populist parties – Five-star movement, and the far-right League party. The new Government is expected to pick a few fights with the European Union on fiscal austerity. Sticking with southern Europe, Spain may be pushed into a snap election after the country’s main opposition party called on a vote of no confidence in the government. Both Italian and Spanish 10-year government bond yields lifted. In contrast, increased demand for high quality government bonds led to a fall in yields of long-dated US, UK, Japanese and German debt. The benchmark US 10-year treasury yield closed the week at 2.93%. The euro fell against the US dollar, and European equity markets took a hiding.
Oil prices closed the week sharply lower, and follow 3½-year highs hit early in the week. The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) price closed the week just shy of US$68/barrel as Russia and OPEC signalled they would plug the supply gap left by Iran and Venezuela.
Foreign
exchange
The USD has had a strong run recently.
But momentum in the world’s reserve currency is cooling.
In terms of levels, the USD (DXY) remains well below the
2015-16 highs. There is still room to move. The Kiwi is
oscillating around a cent range with $0.6900 proving to be
an equilibrium point in the short term. With multiple risks
back on the radar from the global community and unflattering
data expected domestically via the RBNZ Financial Stability
Report and the Terms of Trade, expect the NZD to struggle to
push meaningfully higher. With so many risks around and
global yields falling the benchmark US 10-year yield is now
below 3.00% which has taken the USD lower with it. However,
this has not lead to NZD/USD strength given the generalised
risk off tone cloaking markets. .
Interest rates
The curve has flattened as global yields
retrace from the highs on multiple geopolitical risks.
Short-end yields continue to find good support, with the
2-year swap finding good pay side support below 2.20%, and
equally good receive side around the 2.25% level. NZ
long-end yields have fallen with the US 10-year yield
needing to consolidate above 3.00% in order to confirm the
break and thus a steeper curve, that is yet to occur with
the emphasis now on the raft of US data and soothing of
geopolitics risks.
Upcoming Events – Domestic
Apr Building Consents (Wednesday)
Last: 14.7%
mom
Residential building consents jumped 14.7%
mom in March, thanks to a lift in Auckland apartments – a
volatile series. The pick-up in consents of recent months
merely provides a distraction to the fact that residential
consents are only gradually above levels seen in late 2017.
Capacity constraints faced by the construction sector are
likely to limit the extent that consents can lift from
here.
May RBNZ Financial Stability Report
(Wednesday)
We have the RBNZ’s semi-annual
Financial Stability Report (FSR) on Wednesday to look
forward to. The May FSR is overshadowed by the Australian
Royal Commission into misconduct in the banking industry.
Some banks in Australia have not been playing nicely and
there are some concerns that this maybe the case here. We
expect there to be some response to this by the RBNZ in the
FSR. The main development at the last FSR back in November
was the RBNZ’s decision to loosen Loan-to-value ratio
(LVR) restrictions on both residential and investor lending.
We don’t expect any changes to macro-prudential policy
this week. There was little mention of macro-prudential
policy from Adrian Orr at the Bank’s recent Monetary
Policy Statement (MPS). Moreover, there is unlikely to be
much appetite from the RBNZ to stoke a resurgence in credit
growth given the gradual recovery seen in house price
appreciation over the last few months. Key themes of the FSR
are likely to remain the high levels of indebtedness of
households and the dairy sector. The latter faces the added
risk of the current Mycoplasma bovis scare. The RBNZ is also
likely to note the recent tightening in global financial
market conditions following the rise in LIBOR/OIS spreads in
the US. .
May ANZ Business Outlook Survey
(Thursday)
Monthly balance – Last: -$86mn;
Consensus: $198mn
Business confidence has been
surprisingly subdued in recent months, with the hangover
from a change in government lingering much longer than
expected. The ANZ-Roy Morgan Business Outlook survey in
April recorded a dip in firms’ outlook for their own
activity – led by a sharp fall in the construction sector.
A net 17.8% of businesses expect a rise in their own
activity over the coming year, down from a net 22% the month
prior and a net 43% in June last year. Capacity constraints
in the construction sector look to be playing a role here,
holding back investment and hiring decisions. However, this
pessimism may not last. The BusinessNZ Performance of
Manufacturing (PMI) index jumped almost 6 points in April to
a reading of 58.9 – indicative of decent pace of growth in
the month.
Mar Qtr Terms of Trade Index
(Friday)
Last: 0.8% qoq; Consensus: -2.0%
qoq
NZ’s merchandise Terms of Trade (ToT), an indicator
of our purchasing power with the rest of the world, reached
another recorded high in the December 2017 quarter. The 0.8%
qoq rise was supported by solid increases in the prices of
many key export commodities such as meat and dairy (in
particular butter and cheese). The price of imports also
lifted in the quarter but by a lesser extent. Since the
start of the year commodity prices have consolidated on
recent gains. However, key import prices have posted some
decent gains, in particular oil. We may see the first fall
in NZ’s ToT in the March quarter since the September
quarter of 2016. The market is picking a 2% qoq fall.
Nevertheless, NZ’s ToT is expected to remain elevated for
the foreseeable future, one factor we believe will help lift
in GDP growth over 2018.
Upcoming Events -
International
•
Australia: Private Sector Capex
• China:
Official and Caixin Manufacturing PMIs
• Japan:
Unemployment rate, Industrial production
• United
States: Non-Farm Payrolls, Consumer Confidence, Fed Beige
Book, PCE Deflator
• Eurozone: CPI
For event
details, please view the PDF report.
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