Another outing with Journalist Tarric Brooker, as we pick over the latest data, with a focus on what is happening in the real economy. We also discuss the real race many are running in terms of no real income growth, and the political and economic implications of this ahead.
You can find Tarric’s charts at https://www.burnouteconomics.com/
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
Markets Are Clearly Confused. The S&P 500 closed sharply lower on Wednesday, suffering its biggest one day lost since 2022 as tech stocks nosedived following underwhelming second-quarter earnings from heavyweights Alphabet and Tesla.
After the recent political machinations in America, with Trump in the ascendency, followed by the switch from Biden to Harris, the Trump trade got reversed. In Big Tech, the rotation from AI stocks has continued, as players like Google reportedly are spending even more Capax than expected investing in AI, without a clear uptick in revenue, while Tesla pushed out some of their new business plans, while reporting weaker sales revenue.
Then we have the prospect of US rate cuts now emerging in September, having at the start of the year priced in up to six cuts, a month ago considering a rise as inflation appeared more sticky, but now economic cracks may suggest a series of cuts soon.
And in China, data continues to be weak, after the recent conflab there did little to clarify Government support for the weak economy, with speculation rise that they will wait for the US election result.
And while rate cuts continued in Canada yesterday, and are expected in Europe, and the UK, in appears rate rises are more likely in Japan and Australia.
Finally, we have the normal summer thinner volumes, and then the prospect of the typically wobbly markets we often see in September and October, before a run up towards the end of the year.
So traders are going cautious, taking money off the table, and into safe havens, switching from the high tech bet, and watching for the next moves.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants.
A new report from the Finance Industry Peak Body, UK Finance, which represents more than 300 firms in the UK, reveals that cash remained the second most popular payment method, after debit cards – with an estimated three million people still relying on it. Their research suggests 1.5 million mainly used cash in 2023, up from 900,000 the previous year.
This was it appears an unexpected jump in the number of people who mainly use notes and coins for their daily spending, despite all the propaganda that the UK moving closer to becoming a cashless society. A UK Finance spokesperson said it would monitor the situation regarding people who mainly used cash to see if this was the start of a trend or merely a “statistical blip”. We think it’s more than that.
As I highlighted in a recent post the chaos caused by the global IT outage last week underlines the risk of moving towards a cashless society. Even if the data forecasts that cash will represent only 6% of payments in a decade’s time, it’s critical if other systems go down, as we saw with the outage last week” UK Finance said. This is as close to the Swedish message of make sue you keep cash on hand in case of emergencies as it gets, without saying it!
In Australia, as I reported recently there was also a rise in cash usage, despite the banks best worst efforts, and the recommendation from the recent Senate Inquiry into Regional Branch closures also recommend making access to cash an essential service.
Its simple really people, keep using cash, and we retain a backup in case of emergency. We also know people using cash regularly has a better handle on their finances, teaches kids the real value of money, and acts as an antidote to tap tap credit based society, where banks make a dollar from every transaction, which costs us all. While the war on cash is far from over, use it, or lose it. Its that simple!
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
This is an edited version of a live discussion with Dr Cameron Murray, Independent Economist over at Fresh Economic Thinking.
Fresh Economic Thinking is Australia’s newest think-tank, with independent and insightful takes on major economic debates.
Cameron thinks economics could be much better than it is so he often writes very fine technical critiques of economic theory and comments on the nature of the profession. He specialises in property and housing markets, environmental economics, and corruption. I dabble in just about everything: macro, money, institutions, evolutionary economics, and more.
For the past four years, he was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in the Henry Halloran Trust at The University of Sydney.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
https://digitalfinanceanalytics.com/blog/dfa-one-to-one/ for our One to One Service.
n our latest show we pull apart some of the recent property spruiking, look at the latest numbers and deep dive into the gap between the “speak” from policy makers and the “reality” of what they do. As a result we underscore the need to go local, and not be misled by high-level waffle!
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants.
Well, last week we got a glimpse of the vulnerability of global IT systems, including payment systems, the latest and perhaps most significant of a chapter of accidents, ranging from banks systems going down, through to disruption from floods and fire, when only physical payments in cash were accepted. US cyber-security firm CrowdStrike said it was responsible for the mayhem, which started on Friday after sending a ‘defective’ update to machines running Microsoft apps. Microsoft has suggested customers try rebooting their computers 15 times to resolve the issue.
The IT outage prompted federal politician Bob Katter to demand cash remains in circulation amid the “danger” of relying on digital technology. “This a wake-up call that the risk associated with a cashless society is too high for us to pay,” Mr Katter said.
According to a recent online survey, titled Cashless Future 2024’ while fewer payments may be made in cash these days, Australians are still expressing serious concerns about heading towards a cashless society. Seven in 10 say they’ve concerned, while two in five Aussies are extremely concerned about notes and coins becoming relics.
Significantly, even people who don’t use cash can be concerned about moving towards a cashless society for reasons including privacy concerns, security risks and dependency on technology. This includes concerns about their transaction data being tracked and analysed by corporations or government agencies, and digital payment systems can sometimes be vulnerable to technology outage, hacking or fraud. A recent report said: “Concerns about technological glitches, network outages, or power failures could lead to worries about being unable to make payments in the absence of cash.”
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
In our latest weekly market update, we start in the US, move to Europe and Asia and end in Australia as well as covering commodities and crypto, as a way of digesting all that has happened this past few days.
This past week, was again packed full of contradictory signals, with World stock indexes falling on Friday as a global cyber outage rattled investors by disrupting operations across multiple industries, while the dollar climbed alongside Treasury yields. All three US indices fell, as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq registered their biggest weekly percentage declines since April. while Gold briefly traded below $US2400 an ounce, oil fell 3 per cent to trade below $US83 a barrel and iron ore slid 1 per cent, while the second quarter earnings season is off to a mixed start.
A growing number of analysts and strategists are telling clients there is fragility among the stock giants having touched highs recently. Now the dilemma for investors is after 10 months of a big rally, should investors stick with their big winners or change tack remembering that history says wealth is created by a tiny number of companies, and most stocks will make investors poorer.
The market is overbought but analysts are split on whether the strong breadth improvements will be bullish for stocks moving forward or a rotation away from technology where most of the growth has been means markets will fall.
As with global stocks, concentration in the Asia-Pacific region is at 35-year highs, and CBA (which has been the fourth-largest contributor to returns in the region in the past 20 years, on BofA’s numbers) has been a prime mover; it is one of just eight stocks that have delivered 80 per cent of the gains in the MSCI Asia Pacific (excluding Japan) index this year.
There will be more madness ahead!!
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
The latest RBA bulletin, just released, contained a couple of significant articles relating to mortgage arrears and serviceability. The first, “Recent Drivers of Housing Loan Arrears” shows that Housing loan arrears rates have increased from low levels since late 2022, with banks expecting them to rise a bit further from here. High LVR and DTI loans are most at risk. No surprise there.
The second, “How the RBA Uses the Securitisation Dataset to Assess Financial Stability Risks from Mortgage Lending” makes the point that the data used relating to around one third of loans, contains lags of up to 2 years especially for highly leverage loans, which limits the usefulness of that dataset.
Securitisation data collected by the RBA, forming the Securitisation Dataset, on residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) as a condition for eligibility as collateral in repurchase agreements with the RBA. These loan-level data are provided monthly, and are both timely and granular. The data provide detailed information about each loan that can be used to help form a view of financial health among mortgagors. As lenders can face incentives to select certain types of loans for securitisation or ensure the performance of loans after issuance, the data may not be fully representative of all mortgages in the Australian market. In other words, the loans are hand-picked for securitisation.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
The ABS released the latest employment data today, and in response, investors have bumped up their bets on an August interest rate rise after the jobs market recorded another month of strong employment gains in June.
As always there is a degree of numberwanging here, and the numbers are being flattered by the still strong migration, but the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose by less than 0.1 percentage point to 4.1 per cent in June, With employment rising by around 50,200 people and the number of unemployed growing by 10,000 people, the unemployment rate rose slightly to 4.1 per cent, and the participation rate rose to 66.9 per cent.
The employment growth figures were better than market expectations for gains of 20,000 and highlighted the continuing resilience of the local jobs market in the face of the fastest interest rate tightening cycle in decades.
“The participation rate in June was only 0.1 percentage point lower than the historical high of 67.0 per cent in November 2023. The employment-to-population ratio rose by 0.1 percentage point to 64.2 per cent, which was also close to its historical high of 64.4 per cent in November 2023.
This increase in employment was not enough to stop the jobless rate from rising to 4.1 per cent last month from 4 per cent in May, as a continuing surge in foreign arrivals helped push the participation rate to a near-record high of 66.9 per cent.
With inflationary pressures remaining uncomfortably strong, investors now ascribe a one-in-five chance the RBA board will increase the cash rate from 4.35 per cent to 4.6 per cent when it next meets on August 6, up from a 14 per cent chance before the jobs data. They are also pricing a 28 per cent chance of a move higher by September, up from 17 per cent on Wednesday.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
My Saturday show highlighted the start of the rotation from tech stocks to the broader market, as exemplified in the trends in the NASDAQ and the Small Caps 2000. This trend has continued, and on Wednesday it went into overdrive as the world’s largest technology companies got hammered as concern about tighter US restrictions on chip sales to China spurred a selloff in the industry that has led the bull market in stocks.
I was around for the dot-com bubble, a stock market bubble that ballooned during the late-1990s and peaked on Friday, March 10, 2000. This period of market growth coincided with the widespread adoption of the World Wide Web and the Internet, resulting in a dispensation of available venture capital and the rapid growth of valuations in new dot-com startups.
One common theme is “its different this time”. You cannot apply normal valuation rules, they do not apply. Well, of course the recent AI trends have been driven by confidence of a new business era, and people again are talking about new rules, despite the fact that companies like NVIDA have sold the lions share of their cards to established and cashed up big tech companies like Microsoft, and others in a weird feedback loop. The real benefits of AI for normal downstream businesses are still to come.
So are we seeing the start of another tech-wreck? I think its too soon to tell.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/