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Dec seasonality, Rates, Wages, Bitcoin, MYEFO to confirm return to deficit

Dec seasonality, Rates, Wages, Bitcoin, MYEFO to confirm return to deficit

Investment markets and key developments over the past week

Global shares were mixed over the last week with a back up in bond yields and a bit of profit taking after a strong run up weighing on US and Eurozone shares leading to small falls. Chinese shares also fell slightly but Japanese shares rose slightly. Australian shares fell around 1.7% for the week with profit taking after a strong run up and concerns shares may have run ahead of the likely outlook for earnings next year. The falls were led by IT, financial, industrial and property shares. Bond yields generally rose, except in Japan. Oil prices rose but remain in the same $US0.67 to $US0.72 range they have been in for the last two months. Metal and iron ore prices rose but gold prices fell. The $A fell slightly and the $US rose.

Geopolitical tensions continued over the last week with the fall of the Assad regime in Syria. It potentially weakens Russia and Iran, adds to the instability in the Middle East and runs the risk that it’s a case for the Syrian people of being tipped out of the frying pan and into the fire (as occurred with the removal of Sadam Hussein in Iraq). But its implications for investment markets are minimal as its not a big oil producer, just like Israel and Lebanon.

Shares remain torn between the negatives of rich valuations, higher bond yields, uncertainties as to how much central banks will cut rates or in Australia’s case when the RBA will cut, uncertainties around Trump’s trade policies and geopolitical risks on the one hand versus the positives of global central banks being in an easing cycle, goldilocks economic conditions particularly in the US, optimism that Trump will reinvigorate the US economy and prospects for stronger profits ahead in Australia. And we are now in a seasonally strong period of the year for shares. Our overall assessment remains that the trend is still up, including for Australian shares, but expect a more volatile and constrained ride over the year ahead.

It’s worth noting that while December is normally a seasonally good month for shares, the first half of the month is often a bit soft before strength kicks in over the Christmas period. But of course, it’s not guaranteed.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

US inflation remained elevated in November. The bad news is that core CPI inflation has been stuck around 3.3%yoy for several months now, goods price inflation may be bottoming and the breadth of CPI increases above 3%pa has picked up a bit. The good news though is that rent inflation is slowing, services inflation is likely to slow further with unit labour cost growth now running around 2%yoy and the CPI and producer price inflation data suggests core private final consumption inflation for November of 0.15%mom or 2.9%yoy, which is okay.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

But while US inflation remains a bit elevated, it was no worse than expected and slowing shelter inflation with a likely softer monthly core PCE rise will be viewed favourably by the Fed so another 0.25% rate cut is likely in the week ahead. However, expect a more gradual pace of easing next year.

Meanwhile, the drum beat of global rate cuts continues with the Bank of Canada, the ECB and Swiss National Bank cutting rates again in the past week. The BoC cut by 0.5% to 3.25% and flagged a “more gradual approach” going forward. Nevertheless, with falling inflation, nearly 7% unemployment and threats to growth from US tariffs it’s expected to cut to 2.5% next year. The ECB cut its rates by 0.25% taking its deposit rate to 3% and moved more dovish by dropping a reference to keeping policy “sufficiently restrictive”. It’s likely to cut to 1.5% next year on the back of low inflation and weak growth with Trump’s tariffs not helping. The Swiss cut by 0.5% to just 0.5%, but its doubtful other central banks will get that low! Of global central banks latest decisions, around 45% have been to cut, around 50% have been to hold and only around 5% have been to hike.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

In Australia, the RBA took a step towards preparing the ground for easing next year by shifting its commentary in a more dovish direction. While it left rates on hold at 4.35% it noted softer economic data and that its “gaining some confidence that inflation is moving sustainably towards target”. RBA guidance inevitably shifts around a bit because the RBA has to be flexible when the facts change so it’s dangerous to hang too much on to its guidance as its more an indication as to what it is thinking when provided as opposed to what it will necessarily do.

Is NAIRU lower than the RBA and most economists think? Two weeks ago, based on our assessment as to what we thought the RBA will do we shifted our expectation for the first rate cut from February to May and strong jobs data for November that saw unemployment fall back to 3.9% is arguably consistent with that so May remains our base case for the first cut. However, we remain of the view that the RBA should be cutting rates sooner rather than later as: the economy is coming in weaker than expected with an ongoing per capita recession; the strong November jobs data looks odd and prone to a reversal given soft job ads and business hiring plans; despite the low unemployment rate, wages growth is slowing as evident in both the official wages data along with evidence from enterprise agreements and advertised salaries on Seek – this suggests that the unemployment rate may actually be above NAIRU rather than below it!; and December quarter trimmed mean inflation is likely to slow to 0.6%qoq or less which is a pace consistent with the 2 to 3% inflation target. As a result, and along with the RBA’s more dovish guidance I don’t have a lot of confidence in the precise timing and see it as 50/50 as to whether the RBA will cut in February or wait till May. Much will depend on the next rounds of inflation, jobs and consumer spending data. Either way we see rates falling to 3.6% by the end of 2025.

The Australian money market is now back to a 50% probability of a February rate cut (down from 65% after the RBA meeting) and has 1.7 cuts priced in by May.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

Tariffs and sunshine. RBA Deputy Governor Hauser had an interesting speech on Australia’s vulnerability to US tariffs. Australia’s direct exposure is modest given modest exports to the US so the indirect effect is likely to be more significant. And here, while there are a lot of unknowns he seems to lean to the view that the drag on GDP may only be slight like 0 to -0.2% and that the impact on inflation is ambiguous. Maybe his best chart was the one below showing sunshine levels in London and Sydney. Its likely similar for many Australian cities and provides a key reason for Australians to be more cheerful than their UK counterparts.

Source: Australian Bureau of Meteorology, UK Met Office, RBA

Seven things to bear in mind regarding Bitcoin. Bitcoin’s run up to $US100,000 has generated a lot of interest and it likely has more upside on the back of recent momentum and as it settles in as a form of “digital gold”. But there are seven key things investors need to bear in mind regarding it and wider crypto currencies:

  1. Bitcoin’s use case beyond an asset to speculate on remains unclear, unlike other cryptos like Ethereum.
  2. However, it is attracting money that might otherwise have gone to gold as investors seek an alternative non-confiscatable, independent of government asset.
  3. But since it produces no income flow (unlike rents for property or earnings for shares) it’s impossible to value – similar to gold.
  4. Bitcoin is highly volatile having had four 80% or so plunges in “crypto winters” since its inception, and the same is likely again after the current run comes to an end, maybe next year.
  5. It’s increasingly correlated with shares with more than double the movements up and down.
  6. The gains in each upswing appear to be slowing as the easy gains are diminishing over time. See the next chart.
  7. But a 2 or 3 fold increase from the 2021 high would still take it to around $US135,000 to $US200,000!

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

Major global economic events and implications

US small business optimism surged in November on the back of optimism that Trump will boost the US economy. Jobless claims rose in the last week but remain low.

Source: Macrobond, AMP

An interesting aspect of the November US jobs data is that permanent job losers as a percentage of the labour force are trending up consistent with the downtrend in job openings and quits in warning that the US labour market is still cooling. This in turn highlights the ongoing case for the Fed to cut rates further.

Source: Macrobond, AMP

Stimulus talk in China is continuing with policy makers saying monetary policy will be “moderately loose”, fiscal policy “more proactive” and elevating the importance of boosting consumption suggesting that more stimulus is on the way next year. The need for more stimulus was highlighted by November data showing CPI inflation falling to just 0.2%, producer prices down 2.5%yoy and imports falling 3.9%yoy.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP

Australian economic events and implications

Surprisingly strong jobs data for November – but is it for real? November jobs data was far stronger than expected with employment up by 35,600 and unemployment back below 4% to 3.9% and labour market underutilisation rolling over again all suggesting the jobs market is tightening again.

Source: ABS, AMP

However, this is hard to square with the slump in GDP growth in the economy – with jobs growth at 2.4%yoy and hours worked growth at 2.1%yoy running well above GDP growth of 0.8%yoy (which is a horrible look for productivity) and with falling job vacancies and business hiring plans evident in our Jobs Leading Indicator. Maybe its due to ongoing strength in public sector employment and labour hoarding or maybe there’s a bit of statistical noise in there with the ABS noting “a higher than usual number of people moving into employment who were unemployed or waiting to start work”, which could reverse next month. Whatever, it is we are a bit sceptical and continue to expect softer jobs growth and higher unemployment ahead.

Source: ABS, AMP

Going the other way was the November NAB business survey which showed falls in business conditions and confidence with conditions at their weakest since the pandemic.

Orders remain weak and on the jobs growth employment plans still point to weaker jobs growth ahead.

Source: ABS, NAB, AMP

Meanwhile the NAB survey shows a further easing trend in cost and price pressures. Final product price growth is running at 0.6%qoq which is 2.4% annualised which is consistent with the RBA’s 2.5% inflation target.

Source: NAB, AMP

Australian population growth slowing at last but its still strong. Population growth slowed to 552,000 or 2.1% over the year to the June quarter from 638,400 or 2.5%yoy over the year to the June quarter last year as net migration slowed to 446,000. June quarterly net migration slowed to 63,155, its lowest in three years but the June quarter is often seasonally soft so it exaggerates the slowdown. The good news is that immigration is starting to come back under control as student numbers normalise and tighter visa arrangements impact. But net migration last financial year still exceeded the May Budget forecast for 395,000. And total population growth last financial year of 552,000 implies we should have built around another 221,000 dwellings whereas dwelling completions were only around 176,000 implying an addition to the housing shortage of around 45,000 homes taking it to at least 200,000 homes nationwide.

Source: ABS, AMP

Monthly visa data excluding tourists and monthly net permanent and long term arrivals data point to a further slowing in net migration with the former suggesting a fall back to around pre-pandemic levels but the latter suggesting its still higher.

Source: Macquarie Macro Strategy, ABS, AMP

What to watch over the next week?

The week ahead will see business conditions PMIs released for November on Monday. These are likely to remain at okay levels on average but with strength in the US and softness in Europe, Japan and Australia and with services strong but manufacturing weak. Key to watch will be whether the broad-based weakness in manufacturing conditions flows through to services.

In the US the focus will be on the Fed (Wednesday) which is expected to cut the Fed Funds rate by another 0.25% taking it to 4.25-4.5%. The dot plot of Fed officials interest rate expectations is expected to show 3 rate cuts next year, down from 4 in September. In other US data, expect a 0.5% rise in retail sales, a 0.2% rise in industrial production and still soft home builder conditions (all Tuesday), a 2% rise in housing starts (Wednesday) and a rise in core private final consumption inflation to 2.9%yoy (Friday).

Canadian inflation for November (Tuesday) is likely to fall to 1.9%yoy with underlying measures remaining around 2.4%yoy.

The Bank of England (Thursday) is expected to leave rates on hold at 4.75%, with dovish guidance. UK inflation for November (Wednesday) is likely to also rise slightly to 2.4%yoy with core inflation falling slightly to 3.2%yoy.

The Bank of Japan (Thursday) is expected to leave rates on hold at 4.25% with indications of another hike early next year. Japanese inflation data for November (Friday) is likely to show a rise to 2.9%yoy with core inflation rising slightly to 1.7%yoy.

Chinese economic activity data for November (Monday) is likely to show a further slight improvement with retail sales growth expected to pick up to 5%yoy from 4.8%yoy.

In Australia, the Government’s Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook is likely to confirm a steep slide back into a budget deficit for this financial year and the years ahead as the “rivers of gold” flowing to Canberra from strong commodity prices and the strong jobs market slow and structural spending pressures impact. This year’s budget deficit forecast is likely to be around $25bn which is a bit smaller than the $28bn forecast back in the May Budget as budget data up to October show the budget tracking around $6bn better than expected. But subsequent years are likely to look worse as extra spending hits. The Treasurer is also likely to unveil more government spending with an extra $1.4bn or so in childcare spending already announced and even more under “decisions taken but not yet announced” to be unveiled ahead of the coming election, although he has said it won’t be “big spending”. The Government’s inflation forecasts are likely to be little changed but near-term growth forecasts are likely to be revised down to around 1.5% for this financial year from 2%.

On the data front in Australia, consumer sentiment data (Tuesday) is likely to show a slight rise after dovish RBA commentary and housing credit growth (Friday) is likely to remain moderate.

Outlook for investment markets

Global and Australian shares are expected to return a far more constrained 7% in the year ahead. Stretched valuations after two strong years, the ongoing risk of recession, the likelihood of a global trade war and ongoing geopolitical issues will likely make for a volatile ride in 2025 with a 15% correction somewhere along the way highly likely. But central banks still cutting rates with the RBA joining in and prospects for stronger growth later in the year supporting profits should still see okay investment returns.

Expect the ASX 200 to end 2025 at around 8,800 points.

Bonds are likely to provide returns around running yield or a bit more, as inflation slows to target, and central banks cut rates.

Unlisted commercial property returns are likely to start to improve in 2025 as office prices have already had sharp falls in response to the lagged impact of high bond yields and working from home.

Australian home prices are likely to see further weakness over the next six months as high interest rates constrain demand and unemployment rises. Lower interest rates should help from mid-year though and we see average home prices rising by around 3% in 2025.

Cash and bank deposits are expected to provide returns of over 4%, but they are likely to slow in the second half of 2025 as the cash rate falls.

The $A is likely to be buffeted between the positive of a narrowing in the interest rate differential between the Fed and the RBA and the negative of US tariffs and a potential global trade war. This could leave it stuck between $US0.60 and $US0.70.

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