German PMI services revised up to 54.4, renewed vigour at the end of Q2

    Germany PMI services was revised up to 54.4 in June, from initial estimate of 53.9. It’s also notably better than May’s reading at 52.1 and hit a 4-month high.

    Commenting on the final PMI® survey data, Phil Smith, Principal Economist at IHS Markit said:

    “The service sector showed renewed vigour at the end of the second quarter, with the final PMI data indicating an even stronger rebound in business activity growth than was signalled by the earlier ‘flash’ estimate.

    “June’s increase in activity in the largely domestically-focussed service sector was the steepest seen since February and strong enough to offset a further loss of momentum across manufacturing, where slowing global trade has weighed on growth.

    “There was more good news for the German labour market in June as the rate of service sector employment growth picked up to the fastest since January. An expanding workforce base represents another factor supporting household spending, alongside upward wage pressures and still-elevated consumer confidence.”

    Full Germany PMI services release.

    France PMI services revised down to 55.9, growth remained weak in Q2

      France PMI services was revised down to 55.9, from 56.4 in June, but up from May’s 54.3. PMI composite rose to 55.0, up from May’s 54.2.

      Trevor Balchin, Economics Director at IHS Markit which compiles the France Services PMI® survey, said:

      “French private sector expansion picked up in June, driven by a rebound in the services sector that more than offset a further slowdown in manufacturing output growth. Services activity has now outpaced goods production for the fifth month in a row.

      “The overall rate of output growth was the second-weakest since January 2017, however, and on a quarterly basis the reading for Q2 (55.4) was the weakest since the final quarter of 2016 (52.0). This suggests that economic growth may remain weak in the second quarter, after the latest official release of GDP data confirmed a sharp slowdown in the first three months of the year. GDP growth slowed to 0.2% quarter-on-quarter in Q1 2018, having trended at an impressive 0.7% throughout the previous five quarters.”

      Full France PMI services release.

      Italy PMI services rose to 54.3, a welcome upturn

        Italy PMI services rose to 54.3 in June, up from 53.1 and beat expectation of 53.3. Markit noted that was fastest rises in activity and new work since February. Backlogs also increased at the fastest pace in over eight years. Input price inflation rose to highest level since June 2016.

        Paul Smith, Economics Director at IHS Markit which compiles the Italy Services PMI® survey, said:

        “There was a welcome upturn in service sector expansion during June, with both activity and new work registering stronger gains relative to the previous month.

        “The data raise hopes that the services economy is recovering from the general growth slump that has been observed since expansion hit a multi-year high at the start of the year.

        “Whilst less exposed to the trade-induced downswing that has hit manufacturing – and in that respect rising global protectionist measures – political instabilities and the potential for tightening credit conditions are notable headwinds to growth in the coming months.

        “Indeed, such factors continue to weigh on service sector business confidence, which hovered close to a two-year low in June. With that in mind, and following an expected rise of around 0.1% in Q2, GDP growth in the second half of the year is likely to remain in a fairly subdued range.”

        Full Italy PMI services release.

        US faced objections from over 40 countries on auto tariffs at WTO

          Reuters reported, according to unnamed source, that the US faced strong objections from over 40 countries over its possible auto tariffs at the WTO Council on Trade in Goods. Japan and Russia initiated the discussions and warned such measures could lead to collapse of the rules-based multilateral trading system.

          The European Unions 28 countries, Russia, Switzerland, Norway, Turkey, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, China, Thailand, India, Hong Kong, Qatar, Canada, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Brazil, Mexico all echoed the same concern.

          The US representative avoided to give a direct response and said the topic was already a subject of formal disputes at the WTO. Therefore, it shouldn’t be on the committee’s agenda.

          ECB Praet talked convergence, confidence and resilience

            ECB chief economist Peter Praet said in a speech yesterday that “progress towards a sustained adjustment in inflation has been substantial so far.” And, “the underlying strength of the euro area economy, together with well-anchored, longer-term inflation expectations, provides grounds to be confident that the sustained convergence of inflation will continue in the period ahead, even after a gradual winding-down of net asset purchases.”

            He discussed the three criteria of progress assessment: convergence, confidence and resilience. As for convergence, ECB staff projections expect headline and core inflation to hit 1.7% and 1.9% respectively in 2020. This is a “pattern of convergence” to target. Uncertainty on inflation outlook “has been declining significantly” and risk of deflation “has vanished”. Inflation expectations have been “gradually improving” and domestic cost pressures are “strengthening”. These provide improving confidence. Also, the protected inflation convergence has become ” progressively less reliant on further extensions of net asset purchases”, which shows improved resilience.

            Praet also reiterated that “patience, prudence and persistence” are fully reflected in our latest monetary policy decisions. ECB announced in June to taper the asset purchase to EUR 10B per month after September, and end it after December, based on incoming data. Also, interest rates will remain at present level at least through 2019 summer.

            Full speech of Praet “Ensuring a sustained adjustment in inflation”.

            BoJ Harada: There’s room for employment expansion and few signs of financial imbalances

              BoJ board member Yutaka Harada said in a speech that the central bank’s quantitative and qualitative monetary easing program delivered improvements to production, employment, investment, exports, and fiscal conditions. And, “further indicators are perceptions that the economy is recovering, improvements in income distribution, and women’s entry into the labor market.” He also hit back at the critics of BoJ’s policy as their arguments are “not supported by empirical evidence.”

              Harada reiterated the BoJ’s stance that “it should continue with the current monetary easing with a view to achieving the price stability target of 2 percent, given that, for now, there is still room for an expansion in employment and that there are few signs of financial imbalances.”

              Full 23-page speech of Yutaka Harada on Economic Activity, Prices, and Monetary Policy in Japan.

              China Caixin PMI services rose to 53.9 in June

                China Caixin PMI services rose to 53.9 in June, up from 52.9 and beat expectation of 52.7. Markit noted in the release that output expands at quicker rates at manufacturers and service provides. Staffing levels rise further at services companies, but continue to decline at goods producers. Meanwhile, there were sharper rises in input costs

                Commenting on the China General Services PMI™ data, Dr. Zhengsheng Zhong, Director of Macroeconomic Analysis at CEBM Group said:

                “The Caixin China General Services Business Activity Index stood at 53.9 in June, rising significantly from the previous month. The employment and new business indices both climbed moderately, pointing to a positive trend in the service supply and demand sides. Input costs rose more than prices charged, putting pressure on service providers’ confidence. The index of business expectations, a gauge of companies’ confidence towards the 12-month outlook, dipped from a recent high seen in May.

                “The Caixin China Composite Output Index, which covers both manufacturers and service providers, stood at 53.0 in June, rising significantly from a month earlier, suggesting a stable economy with a positive outlook. The latest surveys also showed stronger increases in input costs and output charges, which put pressure on margins. The indices for new orders and work backlogs were unchanged from the previous month’s readings. The employment index dropped into contraction territory, indicating a deteriorating employment situation. The index of expectations regarding future output also fell, suggesting less optimism across the manufacturing and service sectors. It’s doubtful that China’s economic growth will maintain stable amid tightening credit and regulations.”

                Full release of Caixin PMI services.

                Australia trade surplus at 0.83B, retail sales rose 0.3%

                  In seasonally adjusted terms, Australia trade surplus on goods and services widened to AUD 0.827B in May, well below expectation of AUD 1.21B. Prior month’s figure was also revised sharply lower to AUD 0.472B, from 0.98B. Exports rose 4% mom to AUD 33.562B. Imports rose 3% mom to AUD 34.735B.

                  Full trade balance release.

                  Retail sales rose 0.4% mom in May, above expectation of 0.3% mom. Prior month’s figure was also revised up to 0.5%, from 0.4%. Ben James, Director of Quarterly Economy Wide Surveys noted in the release that “department stores (3.9 per cent) led the rises.” And, “there was also a strong result in clothing, footwear and personal accessories, which rose 2.2 per cent. Both industries were able to rebound after unusually warm weather impacted April sales.”

                  Full retail sales release.

                  UK PM May to meet ministers to work on another Brexit white paper

                    UK Prime Minister Theresa May will meet with senior ministers this Friday, with an effort to resolve all differences regarding Brexit. May would also want to conclude another “white paper” on the issue. Her spokesman said “the PM looked forward to the full discussion which will take place at Chequers on Friday when decisions will be taken on the future partnership the UK is seeking with the EU and the content of the upcoming white paper.”

                    Chancellor of Exchequer Philip Hammond also said “on Friday the cabinet will meet to set out our way forward in our negotiations with the European Union. We recognize that this is now urgent and that we need to make progress.”

                    Gold to form short term bottom around 1236, medium term outlook stays bearish

                      Spot gold dipped to as low as 1238.00 today but drew support from 1236.66 key support and recovered. Indeed, considering bullish convergence condition in 4 hour MACD, gold could be trying to form a short term bottom ahead of 1236.66. Focus is immediately back to 1255.60 minor resistance, break will confirm this and bring stronger rebound.

                      Nonetheless, we’re not expecting the medium term fall from 1365.24 to end that quickly. With or without an interim near term consolidation, fall from 1365.25 is expected to continue. Firm break of 1236.66 will pave the way to 1122.81.

                      Into US session: Risk aversion eased thanks to Germany and China, Dollar pressured

                        Entering into US session, Dollar trades broadly lower for today, Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen followed. Meanwhile, Canadian, Australian and New Zealand Dollar are broadly higher.

                        There is notably easing of risk aversion in early European session. One clear development is the strong rebound in German DAX which is trading up 1.3% at the time of writing. DAX is relieved by news that Chancellor Angela Merkel made a last minute deal with the Rebellious Interior Minister Horst Seehofer in immigration. That came after five hours of talks between the leader of Christian Democrats and Christian Social Union. CAC is trading up 0.97% while FTSE is up 0.54%.

                        Another factor is the reversal in Chinese Stocks. The Shanghai SSE composite dropped to as low as 2722.45 earlier today but closed up 0.41% at 2786.88. The development propelled Australian Dollar back above 0.7328 key cluster support, with 0.74 back in sight.

                        The decline in SSE was so steep, after clearing 3000 psychological, that it’s now close to an important support zone. That is, 100% projection of 3587.03 to 3062.73 from 3129.73 at 2695.44. It’s also now in proximity to 2638.30 (2016 low). Theoretically, downside momentum should slow on oversold condition and this 2638/95 zone should be defended on first attempt. A break above 2848.37 resistance would indicator short term bottoming.

                        There is also prospect of more verbal, or even actual intervention by the Chinese government. But even in that case, the medium term outlook remains bearish as trade war with the US is inevitable. It’s just a matter of time when 2638.30 low is taken out firmly.

                        BoE Saunders: Rates may need to go up a little faster

                          BoE policymaker Michael Saunders warned the markets that their the central bank’s tightening path could be faster then they expected. Saunders is known hawk that started voting for a hike since March meeting. He refers to market pricing of a little bit more than one hike over the next twelve months, and said “if the economy plays out as I expect, it may be that rates need to go up a little faster than that.”

                          He also laid out his expectations for the developments in UK. On the condition that “Brexit unfolding in sort of a smooth and gradual way”, “the economy will continue to grow at around the pace we have seen over the last couple of years … (I) expect the jobless rate to fall a little further; and pay growth will pick up a bit.”

                          Against that background, Saunders believed that “rates might need to rise a little faster”. Still he emphasized that “the general picture is still limited and gradual, not too far and not too fast.”

                          UK PMI construction rose to 53.1, marks three months of sustained recovery

                            UK PMI construction rose to 53.1 in June, up from 52.5 and beat expectation of 52.0. Markit noted in the release that house building remains best performing area of activity. Also, new orders rise at fastest pace since May 2017 and input cost inflation accelerates in the month.

                            Tim Moore, Associate Director at IHS Markit and author of the IHS Markit/CIPS Construction PMI® :

                            “The latest increase in UK construction output marks three months of sustained recovery from the snow-related disruption seen back in March. A solid contribution from house building helped to drive up overall construction activity in June, while a lack of new work to replace completed civil engineering projects continued to hold back growth.

                            “Of the three main categories of construction work, commercial building was sandwiched in the middle of the performance table during June. Survey respondents suggested that improved opportunities for industrial and distribution work were the main bright spots, which helped to offset some of the slowdown in retail and office development.

                            “Stretched supply chains and stronger input buying resulted in longer delivery times for construction materials during June. At the same time, higher transportation costs and rising prices for steel-related inputs led to the fastest increase in cost burdens across the construction sector since September 2017.”

                            Full UK PMI construction release.

                            PBoC Yi: Yuan fluctuation due to USD strength and external uncertainties

                              China’s Central Bank, PBoC, issued a statement in its website regarding Governor Yi Gang’s response to China Securities Journal regarding recent decline in the Yuan.

                              Yi acknowledged the fluctuation in the exchange rate and said the central bank is “pay closing attention”. He attributed to the decline of Chinese Yuan to strength of the US Dollar, external uncertainties and some procyclical behaviors.

                              He also noted that the “managed floating exchange rate system” is based on market supply and demand. And “practice over the years has proven that this system must be effective and must be adhered to”.

                              At the same time, China is committed to deepen the reform of exchange rate marketization and use sufficient policy tools to ” maintain the basic stability of the RMB exchange rate at a reasonable and balanced level.”

                              Full release in simplified Chinese.

                              Suggested reading, our report Has China Given Green light to Renminbi Selloff?

                              RBA kept cash rate at 1.50%, sounds less concerned on exchange rate

                                RBA left cash range unchanged at 1.50% as widely expected. Overall reaction from the markets is muted as the statement provides little new information..

                                On the economy it noted that recent data “continue to be consistent” with the central bank’s forecast of “a bit above 3%” GDP growth in 2018 and 2019. National income was given a boost by higher commodity prices. But term’s of trade are expected to decline over the next few years. Labor market development remains “positive” but wages growth remains “low”. Inflation is expected to remain low “for some time too.

                                RBA maintain the view that further process in lower unemployment will lift inflation back to target. But the progress is likely “to be gradual.”

                                A more notable change is that RBA omitted “An appreciating exchange rate would be expected to result in a slower pick-up in economic activity and inflation than currently forecast.”. It looks like, after the depreciation since January, RBA is less concerned on exchange rate.

                                Full statement below.

                                Statement by Philip Lowe, Governor: Monetary Policy Decision

                                At its meeting today, the Board decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 1.50 per cent.

                                The global economic expansion is continuing. A number of advanced economies are growing at an above-trend rate and unemployment rates are low. The Chinese economy continues to grow solidly, with the authorities paying increased attention to the risks in the financial sector and the sustainability of growth. Globally, inflation remains low, although it has increased in some economies and further increases are expected given the tight labour markets. One uncertainty regarding the global outlook stems from the direction of international trade policy in the United States. There have also been strains in a few emerging market economies, largely for country-specific reasons.

                                Financial conditions remain expansionary, although they are gradually becoming less so in some countries. There has been a broad-based appreciation of the US dollar. In Australia, short-term wholesale interest rates have increased over recent months. This is partly due to developments in the United States, but there are other factors at work as well. It remains to be seen the extent to which these factors persist.

                                The recent data on the Australian economy continue to be consistent with the Bank’s central forecast for GDP growth to average a bit above 3 per cent in 2018 and 2019. GDP grew strongly in the March quarter, with the economy expanding by 3.1 per cent over the year. Business conditions are positive and non-mining business investment is continuing to increase. Higher levels of public infrastructure investment are also supporting the economy. One continuing source of uncertainty is the outlook for household consumption. Household income has been growing slowly and debt levels are high.

                                Higher commodity prices have provided a boost to national income recently. Australia’s terms of trade are, however, expected to decline over the next few years, but remain at a relatively high level. The Australian dollar has depreciated a little, but remains within the range that it has been in over the past two years.

                                The outlook for the labour market remains positive. Strong growth in employment has been accompanied by a significant rise in labour force participation. The vacancy rate is high and other forward-looking indicators continue to point to solid growth in employment. A gradual decline in the unemployment rate is expected, after being steady at around 5½ per cent for much of the past year. Wages growth remains low. This is likely to continue for a while yet, although the stronger economy should see some lift in wages growth over time. Consistent with this, the rate of wages growth appears to have troughed and there are increasing reports of skills shortages in some areas.

                                Inflation is low and is likely to remain so for some time, reflecting low growth in labour costs and strong competition in retailing. A gradual pick-up in inflation is, however, expected as the economy strengthens. The central forecast is for CPI inflation to be a bit above 2 per cent in 2018.

                                Nationwide measures of housing prices are little changed over the past six months. Conditions in the Sydney and Melbourne housing markets have eased, with prices declining in both markets. Housing credit growth has declined, with investor demand having slowed noticeably. Lending standards are tighter than they were a few years ago, with APRA’s supervisory measures helping to contain the build-up of risk in household balance sheets. Some further tightening of lending standards by banks is possible, although the average mortgage interest rate on outstanding loans has been declining for some time.

                                The low level of interest rates is continuing to support the Australian economy. Further progress in reducing unemployment and having inflation return to target is expected, although this progress is likely to be gradual. Taking account of the available information, the Board judged that holding the stance of monetary policy unchanged at this meeting would be consistent with sustainable growth in the economy and achieving the inflation target over time.

                                BoJ said to downgrade inflation forecast in upcoming July meeting

                                  The Nikkei Review reported earlier this week that BoJ will likely lower inflation forecast at the upcoming quarterly Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices. The new projections will be published after July 30-31 meeting.

                                  Back in April, BoJ projected inflation to hit 1.3% in fiscal 2018 and 1.8% for fiscal 2019. In the upcoming projections, BoJ could lower than to 1.0% in fiscal 2018 and 1.5% in fiscal 2019. That will bring the figures in-line with forecasters surveyed by Japan Center for Economic Research, which expected 0.94% inflation in fiscal 2018.

                                  BoJ scrapped its “timeline” of hitting 2% inflation target around fiscal 2019, back in the April statement. But it’s been clarified multiple times by BoJ communications that the “timeline” was merely a projection, not a target.

                                  White House confronts Canada for retaliation tariffs

                                    White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders issued fresh confrontation to Canada as the latter retaliation tariffs on US steel tariffs took effect. Sanders said in a media briefing that “escalating tariffs against the United States does nothing to help Canada. It only hurts American workers.” Sanders added that “we’ve been very nice to Canada for many years, and they’ve taken advantage of that – particularly advantage of our farmers.” And, “the president is working to fix the broken system, and he’s going to continue pushing for that.”

                                    Canada officially slapped tariffs on more than USD 12B of US goods effective on July 1. A range of products were targeted including steel and aluminum, coffee, pizza, condiments, whiskers etc. Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s minister of foreign affairs said that “we will not escalate, and we will not back down.”

                                    Trump holds WTO hostage to request for improvements

                                      While meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte in Washington, US President Donald Trump issued fresh warning to the WTO. When asked is he’s preparing to pull out of the WTO, Trump said it has treated the US “very, very badly and I hope they change their ways”. He added that the US has a “a big disadvantage with the WTO. And we’re not planning anything now, but if they don’t treat us properly, we’ll be doing something,” That came after earlier report Axios, based on unnamed source, that Trump has completed to his officials “I don’t know why we’re in it. The WTO is designed by the rest of the world to screw the United States.”

                                      In an CNBC interview, Tony Fratto, deputy press secretary under President George W. Bush, blasted the idea of leaving WTO. He said, “to say that the United States is a loser in a WTO world is just completely inaccurate. We created the WTO as the dominant economy in the world to serve our interests.” While improvements are needed, there are better ways than “to hold it hostage and to threaten to pull out of it.” And He added that pulling out of WTO is a “ridiculous idea”.

                                      On the other hand, former Trump advisor Dan DiMicco also told CNBC that “If the WTO can’t be any more effective than it has been the last 20 years … then the WTO is not helping the world trading system, it’s hurting it, and we should be prepared to walk away.”

                                      US ISM manufacturing rose to 60.2 despite trade war threat

                                        US ISM manufacturing index rose to 60.2 in June, up from 58.7 and beat expectation of 57.9. Prices paid component dropped to 76.8, down from 79.5 and missed expectation of 78.2. Employment component dropped to 56.0, down from 56.3.

                                        Some quotes from the respondents:

                                        • “U.S. tariff policy and lack of predictability, along with [the] threat of trade wars, [is a] causing general business instability and [is] drag on growth for investments.” (Electrical Equipment, Appliances & Components)
                                        • “We export to more than 100 countries. We are preparing to shift some customer responsibilities among manufacturing plants and business units due to trade issues (for example, we’ll shift production for China market from the U.S. to our Canadian plant to avoid higher tariffs). Within our company, there is a sense of uncertainty due to potential trade wars.” (Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products)
                                        • “The Section 232 steel tariffs are now impacting domestic steel prices and capacity. Base steel prices have already increased 20 percent since March.” (Fabricated Metal Products)
                                        • “The economy and product demand still continue to be strong. Having trouble finding people [to fill] blue collar positions. Lead times for parts and materials are moving out, and we are seeing commodity cost pressures increases with the threat of tariffs. Additionally, suppliers are asking for more price increases.” (Machinery)
                                        • “The uncertainty of U.S. tariffs and the Canada/Mexico/E.U. retaliatory tariffs continues to cloud strategic planning efforts. Contingency planning (for tariffs) is consuming large amounts of manpower that could be used for more productive projects. The tariffs are improving margins in our raw material businesses; however, our businesses which are further up the supply chain are seeing significant inflation.” (Miscellaneous Manufacturing)
                                        • “The steel tariffs continue to drive uncertainty. Projects and services using steel have limited days that prices are good for. Trucking is tight, requiring advanced planning and increasing costs.” (Paper Products)

                                        Full ISM manufacturing index release here.

                                        US Chamber of Commerce launches “Trade Works. Tariffs Don’t” campaign

                                          Follow up on an earlier post, the US Chamber of Commerce launches a campaign today titled “Trade Works. Tariffs Don’t” . It warns that “the administration’s new tariffs threaten to spark a global trade war.”

                                          Such tariffs prompted retaliations with dollars in billions of dollars in tariffs on American-made products. And it criticized that tariffs by the US are ” nothing more than a tax increase on American consumers and businesses–including manufacturers, farmers, and technology companies”. Retaliation by other countries will “make American-made goods more expensive, resulting in lost sales and ultimately lost jobs here at home.”

                                          It emphasized that this is the wrong approach, and it threatens to derail our nation’s recent economic resurgence.

                                          This is the link to an interactive map that shows the impacts state by state.

                                          The chamber also urged Americans to “Send a Message to Congress” to voice out objections against the tariffs.