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 May 1 2011
Upcoming economic and financial market events
Australia
May 2 TD securities inflation gauge (April) Key indicator ahead of the Reserve Bank Board meeting
May 3 RBA Board meeting Interest rates are firmly on hold
May 5 Building approvals (March) Approvals may have lifted 5pct after the 19pct fall in the prior two months
May 5 Retail trade (March) We tip a 0.5pct rise but could be inflated by the late timing of Easter
May 6 RBA Statement on Monetary Policy The RBA’s quarterly economic assessment
Overseas
May 2 US ISM manufacturing (April) The manufacturing sector continues to drive the economic recovery
May 3 US Factory orders (March) A healthy 1.5pct rise is tipped
May 4 US ISM services (April) A small lift from 57.3 to 58.0 is expected
May 6 US ICSC Chain store sales (April) Consumer spending makes up 70pct of US economic growth
May 6 US Non-farm payrolls (April) Private payrolls are tipped to rise by around 200,000
The big picture
- The
“inflation reporting” season is over for another quarter and the one
clear underlying trend is that the inflation bogy will dominate market
action over the next few months. The surge in both headline producer
and consumer prices, suggests that inflationary pressures will be the
hot button issue for the Reserve Bank over the midterm.
- The
impact of the natural disasters earlier in the year is now filtering
through in terms of higher food and vegetable prices, while the surge in
global oil prices is also having a compounding effect on effect
on domestic fuel prices. Unfortunately both these components are areas
that the Reserve Bank cannot control, but no doubt the concern for
policymakers is if the higher inflation readings become entrenched and
feed through the economy.
- At
present the risk of a considerable rise in inflationary expectations is
relatively mild, largely due to the lack of consumer spending and
weakness in an array of sectors. However as the economy ramps up in
the second half of the year, these risks will heighten. Interestingly
the difference between the rise in final producer prices (business
inflation) and input prices highlights how domestic businesses have been
absorbing rising costs. In fact the difference
between the cost of raw materials and final selling prices contracted by
2.9 percentage points in the year to March – marking the largest
contraction in two years.
- More
importantly the underlying measures of inflation seem to suggest that
the Reserve Bank does have a bit more time before needing to jump on the
rate trigger. The annualised reading on underlying inflation
posted at 2.3 per cent - suggesting inflation is still comfortably at
the lower end of the Reserve Bank’s target band of 2-3 per cent. Added
to which the ongoing strength of the Australian dollar will ensure that
the price of imported goods continues to slide
in part offsetting domestic inflationary pressures.
- Overall
it is likely that the Reserve Bank is unlikely to be overly alarmed by
inflation but certainly it will be more watchful in coming months. The
Reserve Bank cannot afford to overreact to just one set of
numbers, especially given that when you average the last two quarters
underlying inflation was closer to 0.6 per cent a quarter. Added to
which it is important to highlight that interest rates are already
mildly restrictive while the high Australian dollar
is also doing some of the work for the RBA in restraining inflation and
economic activity.
- Having
said that interest rates are still likely to rise once again by the end
of the year. The rebuilding following the floods has the potential to
add to inflationary pressures in terms of building costs together
with the tight job market across the country. Also key will be the
anticipated ramp up in business investment.
The week ahead
- The
start of a new month once again ushers in another Reserve Bank Board
meeting. And apart from the rates decision, there is a raft of economic
data for investors to digest over the week.
- The
Reserve Bank has left interest rates on hold for five consecutive
months and once again it is unlikely that there will be any change in
rates when it meets on Tuesday. However there will be a lot more focus
by market participants
on the accompanying statement to gauge how the Reserve Bank interprets
the larger than expected rise in the Consumer Price Index and the
continued strength of the Australian dollar. The key question is if the
rise in inflation will bring forward any future
rate hike.
- We would argue that the
Reserve Bank should leave rates on hold and take more time to assess
future moves given that domestic economic conditions are patchy and
interest rate are already mildly restrictive. But no matter what
action is taken, the Reserve Bank will have plenty of opportunity to
explain its thinking when it presents its latest Statement on Monetary
Policy on Friday.
- In terms of
economic data, the Performance of Manufacturing gauge and the TD
Securities monthly inflation gauge are released on Monday. Also on
Monday the Bureau of Statistics will release data on house prices but
more accurate
private sector figures have already been released. The RP Data-Rismark
Hedonic Australian Home Value index fell by 2.1 per cent in the March
quarter – the largest fall on record.
- New
home sales and the Performance of Services index are slated for
Wednesday together with Bureau of Statistics price data for specific
items like bananas. On Thursday, data on retail trade, building
approvals are issued, while
the Performance of Construction gauge closes out the week on Friday.
- The
TD inflation gauge will be closely watched given it will be released
ahead of the Reserve Bank Board meeting. The increase in the price of
volatile items like fruit and vegetables, as well as rising petrol
prices are starting
to feed through to the headline result. However more importantly the TD
core inflation reading has barely moved, holding between flat and 0.2
per cent higher in the past eight monthly readings.
- We
expect that retail trade rose by 0.5 per cent in March after a similar
0.5 per cent increase in February. The one note of caution on the
economic data is to beware the “Easter effect”. This year Easter
occurred super late
compared with last year coupled with a five day long weekend.
Unfortunately seasonal adjustment programs find it difficult to account
for the “Easter effect”, so it may result in super-strong results in
March followed by a weaker result in April. Clearly it
will be a case of adding the two months together to find out what is
happening.
- And it is likely that
building approvals bounced in March, rising by around 5 per cent, after
the sharp 19 per cent slide over the first two months of the year. There
is also the possibility of revisions to prior month’s figures
given the impact of the wet weather conditions earlier in the year.
Overall it is clear that there is underlying weakness in housing
activity. Not only are building approvals plummeting but the all
important private sector new house segment remains weak, with
a 17 per cent slide in the annual growth rate.
- In
the US, the spotlight shines brightly on the employment (non-farm
payrolls) data to be released on Friday. The job market is clearly
picking up with new claims for unemployment insurance sliding. On
average
economists expect employment to have risen by a healthy 198,000 in April
after gains of 216,000 in March. But the jobless rate is expected to
remain high near 8.8 per cent.
- Of
the other indicators, the ISM manufacturing index and construction
spending are released on Monday. On Tuesday domestic vehicle sales and
factory orders are issued. And on Wednesday the ADP private sector
employment report
is released together with the ISM services index.
Sharemarket
- The
US profit reporting season begins to wind down in the coming week but
there is still around 65 companies from the S&P 500 that are
expected to report earnings. On Monday FMC Corp and Chesapeake Energy
are amongst companies
to report. The bulk of the companies report on Tuesday with MasterCard,
Pfizer, NYSE Euronext and CBS Corp all expected. On Wednesday Kelloggs,
Time Warner, News Corp, and Metlife are slated to release earnings.
While American International Group, Sara Lee
and Visa close out the week on Friday.
- In
Australia, three of the major banks report earnings over the week. ANZ
reports first half results on Tuesday with Westpac to issue results on
Wednesday and National Australia Bank to report on Thursday. Orica
will also release its first half results on Monday while Rio Tinto holds
its AGM on Thursday.
Interest rates, currencies & commodities
- Our
currency strategists have upgraded their forecasts for the Australian
dollar – and with good reason given the growing concerns about US fiscal
imbalances, the structural decline in the US dollar and the
sustained boost to Australia’s terms of trade. The CBA strategists are
tipping the Aussie dollar to hold around US108 cents in June, US112
cents by September and US104 cents by the end of the year. The decline
in the latter part of the year is largely based
on the likelihood that the US Federal Reserve will eventually remove
stimulatory measures and tighten monetary policy as the economic
recovery becomes fully fledged.
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