Important Information
The summary and attached
report has been prepared without taking account of the objectives,
financial situation or needs of any particular individual. For this
reason, any individual should, before acting on the information in this
report, consider the
appropriateness of the information, having regard to the individual’s
objectives, financial situation and needs and, if necessary, seek
appropriate professional advice. In the case of certain securities
Commonwealth Bank of Australia is or may be the only market
maker.
Investor Signposts: Week Beginning April 10 2011
Upcoming economic and financial market events
Australia
April
11 Lending finance (February) New loans
covering personal, commercial, housing and leasing activity
April 12 NAB Business survey (March) Most sectors are finding business conditions challenging
April 13 Treasury model of economy (December) Includes latest wealth data
April 13 Consumer sentiment (April) A modest improvement is expected
April 14 Speech by RBA Governor The topic is “Economic Situation” – sufficiently broad
April 14 New car sales (March) CommSec tips a 1pct lift in sales
Overseas
April 12 US International trade (February) A deficit near US$45bn is tipped, boosted in part by oil imports
April 13 US Retail sales (March) Despite high unemployment, consumers are still spending
April 13 US Federal Reserve Beige Book A summary of conditions across federal reserve districts
April 14 US Producer prices (March) Core inflation is tipped to lift by 0.2 per cent
April 15 US Consumer prices (March) The core rate of inflation is starting to lift
April 15 US Industrial production (March) A solid 0.5pct gain is expected by economists
April 15 Chinese economic data Covers production, inflation, investment and retail sales
The big picture
- One
of the sleeper issues at present is population growth. The latest data
showed that Australia’s population grew by 1.6 per cent in the year to
September, the slowest growth rate in four years and well down
from the peak growth (40-year high) of 2.2 per cent in December 2008.
Slower immigration is the culprit here, not the number of babies being
born, and largely due to Government policy.
- Now
those in favour of a ‘small Australia’ would conclude that the slowdown
in population growth is a favourable development. But they may not hold
those views next time interest rates go up, especially if the
Reserve Bank singles out the tight job market as one of the prime
drivers behind the decision. Because the strong global demand for our
resources and demographics both indicate that demand for labour will
remain strong in coming years. The challenge for Australia
is to ensure that labour supply lifts to meet that higher demand. If it
doesn’t then the one thing that economics shows is that something has to
give – and most likely that means higher wages, and potentially higher
prices.
- As noted by
Professor Peter McDonald, one of the best demographers in Australia,
“barring a major downturn in the world economy, labour demand is likely
to remain very strong into the future.” McDonald argues
that there needs to be urgent action on skills development, the need for
significant growth in public infrastructure, and a “planned,
well-managed immigration program.”
- McDonald
notes that the government’s permanent migration program and domestic
sources of workers have been insufficient to meet the strong demand for
labour so the gap has been filled by temporary migrants.
The question is whether this is a desirable or sustainable situation.
But whatever is eventually decided by policymakers, the simple fact is
that the Government must ensure that an efficient, streamlined system is
in place so that businesses can get the staff
they need. Supply of labour has to lift to meet strong demand otherwise
the consequences will be higher inflation, slower economic growth or
both.
- The other
point by McDonald is that “substantial future population growth” over
the coming decade is embedded in the economy. The higher population
growth must be planned for, especially in terms of infrastructure
demands.
The week ahead
- A
busy week lies ahead with a speech by the Reserve Bank Governor
probably the stand-out. Meanwhile there is a bevy of ‘top-shelf’
economic indicators for release in the US and the latest monthly
readings on the Chinese economy
will be released on Friday.
- On
Thursday morning Australian time (Wednesday lunch-time in New York) the
Reserve Bank Governor will deliver a speech simply titled “Economic
Conditions.” Clearly the RBA Governor will have a broad canvas to paint
on, but it
will be a timely update of the latest views on the economy. No doubt
businesses have been giving RBA liaison officers fairly down-beat views
on the economy. The question is whether the Governor will remain upbeat
about 2011/12.
- In terms of economic
data, most eyes will be on the NAB business survey on Tuesday and the
consumer sentiment report on Wednesday. While the business sector is
generally finding life difficult at present, it still is largely
positive about the future. And consumer confidence may have improved a
tad, but nothing too dramatic. People still haven’t got the sense that
things are back to ‘normal’.
- In
terms of the other economic indicators, data on lending finance kicks
off the week on Monday. Consumers and businesses are more inclined to
save, rather than spend, but there has been a modest pick-up in new
lending in the
past few months that deserves to be monitored.
- On
Wednesday, the Bureau of Statistics and Federal Treasury will publish
the quarterly data from Treasury’s TRYM economic model. At face value
this seems exceedingly dull, but the data will contain the latest
estimates on wealth
– most likely at record highs.
- And
on Thursday, the Bureau of Statistics will recast the latest industry
figures on car sales to take account for seasonal factors. The industry
data indicated that 93,984 vehicles were sold in March, just under 1 per
cent
lower than a year ago. However when seasonal factors are taken into
account, we believe that car sales rose by 1 per cent in the month.
Still, the broad trend is that car sales are going largely sideways.
- In
the US, there is a bevy of ‘top shelf’ indicators due for release in
the coming week. Data on retail sales is released on Wednesday with
producer prices (business inflation) set down for Thursday while figures
on consumer
prices and industrial production are both issued on Friday.
- Overall
the results should be reasonably healthy. Economists tip a 0.5 per cent
lift in retail sales (up 0.6 per cent if car sales are excluded) while
production is expected to have lifted by 0.5 per cent in March after a
flat
reading in February. The prices data should confirm that deflation is no
longer a concern, but – at present anyway – inflation is not an issue
either. Core rates of both producer and consumer prices probably rose by
0.2 per cent in March.
- Of the other
data/events, on Tuesday, trade figures are released alongside import
& export prices and the monthly Budget results. On Wednesday the
latest Federal Reserve Beige Book is issued – covering conditions across
Fed
districts. And on Friday consumer sentiment, capital flows and the
Empire State survey are other indicators to watch.
- The
other event to keep on the radar screen is the usual monthly download
of Chinese economic statistics. On Friday, figures on retail sales,
production, investment and inflation are all issued. Interestingly the
Chinese trade
data is also issued – on April 10 – this Sunday.
Sharemarket
- The
Australian sharemarket is a mere 10 per cent away from record highs.
Sounds too good to be true? What we are tracking is the value of all
shares – the amount of stock on issue multiplied by the share price.
This accounts for the fact that companies raised equity capital in the
global financial crisis as well as the fact that share prices have
recovered post GFC. The value of all shares stands at $1,583 billion,
down from the highs of $1,772 billion in late 2007.
But some sectors have done even better. Market capitalisation of the ASX
200 Resources sector stands at $388 billion, just under 2 per cent
below the record high of $395 billion set in May 2008. Notably 25 per
cent of the entire sharemarket is accounted for
by the top 200 resource stocks, a smidgen below the record high set in
July 2008.
Interest rates, currencies & commodities
- The
Aussie dollar has had an amazing rebound in a short time period,
lifting from US97.25c on March 17 to US104c on April 4 – a gain of
around 7 per cent. Clearly sharemarkets across the globe similarly
rebounded
from lows, highlighting the fact that the Aussie is very much a ‘fair
weather friend’. When there are concerns about the health of the global
economy the Aussie dollar is one of the first to be sold, but it is
quickly back in favour when sentiment improves.
Consumers would expect that the strong Aussie translates into lower
prices for gadgets and indeed that has proved correct. Australia is the
fifth cheapest of 26 countries in the world to buy the new Apple iPad 2
device according to our new CommSec index. The
CommSec iPad 2 index is a modern way of looking at purchasing power
theory. That is, the theory that the same good should be sold for the
same price across the globe once taking into account exchange rates. As
it turns out there are still significant differences
in prices across the globe.
|