The
NZ print media is still avoiding the issue of the collapse of the
world economy compared to the Australian media. It led the news on
Radio New Zealand although the delusionary message that NZ is
somehow, by some magic, 'insulated' from the world economy is being
delivered by our zombie economists – head in the sand to the last.
NZ:
Reality starts to bite
5
June, 2012
The
New Zealand share market opened lower on Tuesday, following drops on
Monday in Australia and Asia and bumpy trading on Wall Street.
Disappointing
employment figures from the United States, Europe's continuing state
debt problem and poor manufacturing figures from several countries
have contributed to share market falls.
More
than 40 shares slipped in price on the New Zealand market on Tuesday
compared with just eight that rose in early trading.
At
11am the NZX 50 index was 0.8% lower at 3422.
Earlier,
in the United States, a dim report on new US industrial orders in
April helped erase opening gains on Wall Street, sending stocks
solidly in the red, before buyers came back in to wipe out the losses
in afternoon trade.
The
Dow Jones index edged down further to close 0.14% lower at 12,101
while the broader S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite rose slightly.
Trade
in European markets was muted on Monday due in part to a public
holiday in London, where markets will also be closed on Tuesday.
In
Frankfurt, the DAX 30 fell 1.2%, but in Paris the CAC 40 added 0.1%.
Madrid finished with a gain of 2.9% despite worries that Spain could
be forced into seeking outside help so as to stabilise its banking
system.
A
currency strategist with Rankin Treasury, Derek Rankin, told Morning
Report a string of woes are behind the jitters.
"There's
a wall of worry out there. The Greek elections - they're talking
about walking away and telling Europe they're not going to pay their
money back. There's been a run on the Spanish banks."
Mr
Rankin said manufacturing data last week from a number of countries
indicated contraction and US jobs data is weighing on markets.
The
Australian 200 Index fell almost 2% on Monday to finish at 3985, it's
lowest level in nearly seven months, and markets in Asia fell amid
fears that the world's major economies will fall back into recession.
An
analyst with City Index in Australia, Peter Esho, said although there
have been larger single day declines on the Australian market,
Monday's fall was continuation of a very long losing streak.
"We're
down now around ten percent from the most recent high and there
doesn't seem to be anything in the near term that's going to break
this downward trend.".
Global
slump alert as world money contracts
Growth
of the world money supply has dropped to the lowest level since the
financial crisis of 2008-2009, heralding a severe economic slowdown
later this year unless authorites rapidly take action.
By
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
4
June, 2012
The
latest data show that the real M1 money supply – cash and overnight
deposits – for China, the eurozone, Britain and the US has been
contracting since the early Spring. Any further falls risk a
full-blown global recession.
Clear
signs of trouble are emerging in the US, until now the last bastion
of strength. The New York Institute of Supply Management said its ISM
business index – a proxy for business demand – flashed a
"screeching halt" in May, crashing to 49.9 from 61.2 in
April, where anything below 50 denotes contraction. Unemployment is
rising again after grim jobs data for April and May, indicating that
the economy may have fallen below stall speed.
Central
bank governors and finance ministers from the G7 bloc are to hold an
emergency teleconference call on Tuesday to grapple with Europe's
escalating crisis. There is mounting anger in North America and Asia
over the failure of the Europeans to use their vast resources to
contain the brushfire in Spain.
The
world money data collected by Simon Ward at Henderson Global
Investors show that real M1 for the G7 economies and leading E7
emerging powers peaked at 5.1pc in November and has since plunged to
1.6pc in April. The data explain why commodity prices are falling
hard, with Brent crude down to a 16-month low of under $97 a barrel.
China's
money data are falling at the fastest pace since records began. The
gauge – six-month real M1 – gives advance warning of economic
output half a year ahead. "Europe needs to start quantitative
easing [QE] immediately and China must ease policy," said Mr
Ward.
The
Americans may act first. Goldman Sachs expects Federal Reserve chair
Ben Bernanke to open the door for QE in testimony on Thursday.
Stock
markets rallied in Madrid and Milan led by bank shares on rumours of
an EU plan to recapitalise banks directly with funds from the EU
bail-out machinery.
Olli
Rehn, the EU economics chief, said use of the European Stability
Mechanism to bail out lenders was a "serious possibility",
adding that it was imperative to "break the link between banks
and sovereigns".
However,
there is no sign yet that Germany will be willing to drop its veto on
such action, viewed by Berlin as the start of debt mutualisation.
Chancellor Angela Merkel crushed talk of an instant "banking
union" after meeting commission president Jose Barroso, saying
their could be no quick fix. She called instead for EU banking
supervision as a "mid-term goal".
Her
spokesman said any options that "resemble eurobonds" are
for the distant future. "It's up to national governments to
decide whether they want to avail themselves of aid. That also
applies to Spain," he said.
Use
of the ESM for bank bail-outs would meet fierce resistance in the
German, Dutch and Finnish parliaments. A senior EU official said even
Germany's Social Democrats are cooling on eurobonds. "They
looked at the polling data and shivered. The German people are not
willing to send money into a bottomless pit," he said.
Investors
Brace for Slowdown
Pressure
Builds for Action by Policy Makers as Global Economic Worries Deepen
WSJ,
4
June, 2012
Pressure
is growing on policy makers around the world to take steps to bolster
their economies as the U.S. and China show fresh signs of slowing and
the fallout from Europe's debt crisis spreads.
As
global economic worries deepen, policy makers around the world are
feeling pressure to gird against the fallout of Europe's debt crisis.
Jonathan Cheng reports on Markets Hub. Photo: AP.
Investors
across financial markets have reacted with increasing alarm at the
drumbeat of bad news from all corners of the world, with economies
sputtering just as troubles in Europe flare anew. Concerns that
Greece may be forced to exit the euro zone have joined worries that
Spain may also collapse under the pressure of a high deficit and
fragile banking system.
Asian
markets were sharply down Monday morning. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index
dropped 2.3%, eliminating all of its 2012 gains. The strengthening
yen continued to put pressure on Japanese exporters, pushing Japan's
Nikkei to a fresh 2012 intraday low before pulling back slightly,
2.1% down. Australia's S&P ASX 200 hit a six-month low, crawling
back to a 1.6% fall. Korea's Kospi fell 2.5%, and Singapore's Straits
Times Index was 1.5% lower.
China's
manufacturing data last week was surprisingly weak, but officials
have signaled there are no plans to reinstate an economic stimulus on
the magnitude of their four-trillion-yuan package, about $630
billion, in 2008.
Potential
market land mines dot the horizon. Greece holds new elections June 17
that will largely determine its course. The Federal Reserve's
rate-setting committee, scheduled for June 19 and 20, could signal
leanings toward further stimulus. And on June 28 and 29, a summit of
European Union leaders in Brussels will be closely watched by
investors for evidence that policy makers will increase efforts to
solve the region's crisis.
The
European Central Bank has been reluctant to step into the crisis,
insisting that governments take the lead. But political leaders have
been unable to agree on solutions. Many investors worry whether
anyone has the ability or the will to tackle the globe's economic
woes.
Some
question, for example, what ammunition the Fed has left. Interest
rates are already at record lows. And with U.S. elections just months
away, many investors doubt Congress will take measures to stimulate
the economy. Even Germany is seeing signs of trouble as its primary
trading partners slump further into the abyss.
"We
are not robust enough to withstand a real European recession,"
said market strategist Edgar Peters, who helps oversee $18 billion at
money-management firm First Quadrant in Pasadena, Calif. "I am
getting less and less optimistic about this."
Some
economists and strategists believe the setbacks, in the U.S. at
least, may be short-lived. Michael Darda, chief economist at
brokerage firm MKM Partners in Stamford, Conn., told clients last
week that the U.S. economy was still growing. Others said the
prospect of more help from the Fed may limit declines. Those
arguments didn't lure many bargain hunters back to stocks last week.
For
financial markets, 2012 is showing many of the hallmarks of 2010 and
2011—healthy gains through April that collapsed into a long and
harrowing summer.
On
Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 274.88 points, or
2.2%, to 12118.57, its lowest value since December. Stocks across
Asia and Europe also slumped.
Bruce
McCain, who helps oversee more than $20 billion as chief investment
strategist at Cleveland's Key Private Bank, an arm of KeyCorp. said
he feared that stocks have further to fall.
"There
is some doubt about whether European and global authorities can
provide enough liquidity to stem the crisis," he said. "There
is a risk of protracted world decline."
The
Dow has given back all of this year's gains and is down 8.7% from the
multiyear high of 13279.32, reached May 1. Germany's benchmark index
dropped 3.4% on Friday.
The
dour U.S. unemployment news Friday was bolstered with data showing
that U.S. manufacturing had cooled in May, and that consumer spending
rose faster than incomes in April—suggesting household finances
remain strained.
The
Labor Department's report was the third consecutive month of
disappointing payroll gains. It followed a government report on
Thursday that lowered its estimate of economic growth in the first
quarter to a weak 1.9% annualized rate.
The
bleak reports prompted speculation that the Fed might respond at its
June meeting with such moves to spur growth as buying bonds to push
down long-term interest rates. But the Fed has been sharply divided,
with some policy makers advocating more action and others opposed for
worry of inflation. Some Fed policy makers had said before Friday's
jobs report that they would support action if the economic outlook
worsened.
Adding
to fears about the U.S. economy are predictions of election-year
paralysis on both taxes and spending. President Barack Obama has
called on Congress to pass proposals he said would boost hiring.
Congressional
Republicans and GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney say the
stumbling U.S. economy shows the failure of Mr. Obama's policies.
The
global troubles have revealed how closely nations and financial
markets have become intertwined. European policy makers had hoped
that U.S. demand would help prop up their economies while they found
a solution to the growing crisis. The U.S., meanwhile, has been
heavily dependent on demand from China and Europe, as has much of
Asia.
Europe
is dealing with the twin threats of Greece and Spain, which are
compounded by its moribund policy-making and its unwinding economy.
The
June 17 elections will put Greece—and the rest of the euro zone—at
a crossroads. A win by the Syriza party—which opposes the terms of
a bailout—could trigger a standoff: Germany and its allies would
have to choose between giving Greece more money or cutting off help.
Spain
is showing serious signs of trouble borrowing money—just at the
moment when its banks appear to need a lot of it. Spain has already
identified that troubled lender Bankia SA needs €19 billion, or
about $24 billion—and it isn't clear where the government will come
up with it.
If
Spain can't aid its banks, it may need to turn to the euro zone for
help. But the European Central Bank, despite calls from some
countries for lower rates or the purchase of government bonds,
indicated it was uncomfortable doing much more beyond providing
unusually large quantities of liquidity to banks.
In
Asia, the fear arising from Europe has exacerbated a slowdown already
taking hold. Some of the biggest market rallies in years at the start
of 2012 were wiped out by the end of last week as financing tightened
amid fears of a global slowdown.
A
wave of economic numbers Friday showed slowing trade hitting Asian
economies. Hopes for a rescue from China took a hit Friday: the China
purchasing managers' index fell to 50.4 in May, down from 53.3 in
April and lower than expectations.
"The
data is turning. Hard," Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian
economics at HSBC said in a note to clients. "The trade cycle is
about to take a hit. Globally, new export orders have started to
contract for the first time since December."
The
impact is being felt in countries like South Korea, where exports
unexpectedly fell for a third straight month in May, as manufacturing
activity there also showed signs of weakness. In India, the
government reported last week economic growth fell to its lowest
level in nine years.
The
combination of weaker exports and lower risk tolerance by investors
and banks in Asia is expected to further slow economies over the
coming months. On the positive side, inflationary pressures, which
had been the key worry among policy makers for most of this year,
have mostly abated, opening the door for more significant stimulus
Asia
stocks tumble, Tokyo hits 28-year low amid global rout
4
June, 2012
Asian shares tumbled on
Monday, pushing the broader Tokyo market to a 28-year low, as
investors extended a rout of global stocks and worried about a
nightmare scenario of euro-zone breakup, U.S. economic relapse and a
sharp slowdown in China.
Tokyo's
broader Topix index lost 2.1 percent to 693.35, a level not seen
since late 1983, as Asian markets plumbed new lows for 2012. Japan's
Nikkei average fell 2 percent after last week marking its ninth
straight week of losses, the longest such losing streak run in 20
years.
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