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05.09.2019
23:30
Japan: Labor Cash Earnings, YoY, July -0.3%
23:30
Japan: Household spending Y/Y, July 0.8% (forecast 1.1%)
22:30
Australia: AiG Performance of Construction Index, August 44.6
22:30
Schedule for today, Friday, September 6, 2019
Time Country Event Period Previous value Forecast
05:00 Japan Leading Economic Index July 93.3  
05:00 Japan Coincident Index July 100.4  
06:00 Germany Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) July -1.5% 0.3%
06:45 France Trade Balance, bln July -5.2  
07:00 Switzerland Foreign Currency Reserves August 768  
07:30 United Kingdom Halifax house price index 3m Y/Y August 4.1% 3.4%
07:30 United Kingdom Halifax house price index August -0.2% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone Employment Change Quarter II 0.3% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone GDP (QoQ) Quarter II 0.4% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone GDP (YoY) Quarter II 1.2% 1.1%
12:30 U.S. Manufacturing Payrolls August 16 8
12:30 U.S. Government Payrolls August 16  
12:30 U.S. Average workweek August 34.3 34.4
12:30 U.S. Average hourly earnings August 0.3% 0.3%
12:30 U.S. Labor Force Participation Rate August 63%  
12:30 U.S. Private Nonfarm Payrolls August 148 150
12:30 Canada Unemployment rate August 5.7% 5.7%
12:30 Canada Employment August -24.2 15
12:30 U.S. Nonfarm Payrolls August 164 158
12:30 U.S. Unemployment Rate August 3.7% 3.7%
14:00 Canada Ivey Purchasing Managers Index August 54.2 53
16:30 U.S. Fed Chair Powell Speaks    
17:00 U.S. Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count September 742  
19:50
Schedule for tomorrow, Friday, September 6, 2019
Time Country Event Period Previous value Forecast
05:00 Japan Leading Economic Index July 93.3  
05:00 Japan Coincident Index July 100.4  
06:00 Germany Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) July -1.5% 0.3%
06:45 France Trade Balance, bln July -5.2  
07:00 Switzerland Foreign Currency Reserves August 768  
07:30 United Kingdom Halifax house price index 3m Y/Y August 4.1% 3.4%
07:30 United Kingdom Halifax house price index August -0.2% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone Employment Change Quarter II 0.3% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone GDP (QoQ) Quarter II 0.4% 0.2%
09:00 Eurozone GDP (YoY) Quarter II 1.2% 1.1%
12:30 U.S. Manufacturing Payrolls August 16 8
12:30 U.S. Government Payrolls August 16  
12:30 U.S. Average workweek August 34.3 34.4
12:30 U.S. Average hourly earnings August 0.3% 0.3%
12:30 U.S. Labor Force Participation Rate August 63%  
12:30 U.S. Private Nonfarm Payrolls August 148 150
12:30 Canada Unemployment rate August 5.7% 5.7%
12:30 Canada Employment August -24.2 15
12:30 U.S. Nonfarm Payrolls August 164 158
12:30 U.S. Unemployment Rate August 3.7% 3.7%
14:00 Canada Ivey Purchasing Managers Index August 54.2 53
16:30 U.S. Fed Chair Powell Speaks    
17:00 U.S. Baker Hughes Oil Rig Count September 742  
16:22
European stocks closed:FTSE 7271.17 -40.09 -0.55%, DAX 12126.78 +101.74 +0.85%, CAC 5593.37 +61.30 +1.11%
15:05
EIA’s report reveals bigger-than-expected decline in U.S. crude oil inventories

EIA’s report reveals bigger-than-expected decline in U.S. crude oil inventories

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) revealed on Thursday that crude inventories decreased by 4.771 million barrels in the week ended August 30. Economists had forecast a drop of 2.000 million barrels.

At the same time, gasoline stocks reduced by 2.396 million barrels, while analysts had expected a decline of 1.750 million barrels. Distillate stocks fell by 2.538 million barrels, while analysts had forecast an increase of 0.400 million barrels.

Meanwhile, oil production in the U.S. decreased by 100,000 barrels a day to 12.400 million barrels a day.

U.S. crude oil imports averaged 6.9 million barrels per day last week, up by 976,000 barrels per day from the previous week.

15:05
BoC: Neutral bias – Westpac

Richard Franulovich, the head of FX strategy at Westpac, notes that the Bank of Canada (BoC) struck a neutral bias for yet another meeting, defying expectations for an explicit easing bias.

  • “Their statement conveyed a notably more squeamish tone, the bank downplaying the upside surprise in Q2 growth and noting that, “escalating trade conflicts and related uncertainty are taking a toll on the global and Canadian economies”.
  • The absence of an explicit BoC easing bias and the USD’s less steady tone in the wake of the lousy August ISM will provide USD/CAD with some breathing room to explore lower levels near term. However, rates markets are not getting carried away and neither should USD/CAD. OIS markets are still pricing in more than 80% chance of a BoC rate cut by their December 2019 meeting.
  • US survey data underscore risks of a weaker Canadian growth path into year’s end. USD/CAD has room down to 1.3100- 1.3150 but the underlying choppy uptrend from Q4 2017 remains intact.”

15:00
U.S.: Crude Oil Inventories, August -4.771 (forecast -2.488)
14:28
U.S. factory orders increase more than forecast in July

The U.S. Commerce Department reported on Thursday that the value of new factory orders rose 1.4 percent m-o-m in July, following a revised 0.5 percent increase in June (originally a 0.6 percent m-o-m gain). That was the largest monthly increase in industrial orders since August of 2018.

Economists had forecast a 1.0 percent m-o-m advance.

According to the report, orders for transportation equipment surged 7.0 percent m-o-m in July after growing 4.1 percent m-o-m in June. There were also gains in orders for computers and electronic products, and electrical equipment, appliances and components. Meanwhile, machinery orders dropped 0.8 m-o-m after rising 1.7 percent m-o-m in June.

Total factory orders excluding transportation, a volatile part of the overall reading, rose 0.3 percent m-o-m in July (compared to a 0.1 percent m-o-m drop in June), while orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, a measure of business spending plans, increased 0.2 percent m-o-m (compared to a 0.9 percent m-o-m climb in June). The report also showed that shipments of core capital goods fell 0.6 percent m-o-m in July, following a flat m-o-m performance in June.

In y-o-y terms, factory orders increased 0.4 percent in July.

14:09
U.S. non-manufacturing sector’s growth accelerates in August - ISM

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported on Thursday its non-manufacturing index (NMI) came in at 56.4 in August, which was 2.7 percentage points higher than the July reading of 53.7 percent. The August reading pointed to the fastest expansion in the services sector since May.

Economists forecast the index to increase to 54.0 last month. A reading above 50 signals expansion, while a reading below 50 indicates contraction.

The 16 non-manufacturing industries reported growth last month, the ISM said, adding that respondents remain concerned about tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty but are mostly positive about business conditions.

According to the report, the ISM’s non-manufacturing business activity measure rose to 61.5 percent, 8.4 percentage points higher than the July reading of 53.1 percent. That reflected growth for the 121st consecutive month, at a faster rate in July. The new orders gauge increased to 60.3 percent, 6.2 percentage points higher than the reading of 54.1 percent in July. The Prices Index advanced 1.7 percentage points from the July reading of 56.5 percent to 58.2 percent, indicating that prices increased in August for the 27th consecutive month. Meanwhile, the employment indicator fell 3.1 percentage points in August to 53.1 percent from the July reading of 56.2 percent.

14:00
U.S.: Factory Orders , July 1.4% (forecast 1%)
14:00
U.S.: ISM Non-Manufacturing, August 56.4 (forecast 54)
13:59
USD/CNY: 7.20 to be the new strong resistance – Westpac

Sean Callow, an analyst at Westpac, notes that after all the headlines on U.S.-China trade and Hong Kong, CNY and CNH are almost dead flat over the week.

  • “7.20 to the dollar seems to be the new strong resistance, with USD/CNH falling about 40-50 pips short on Monday and Tuesday (<0.01%) and USD/CNY rolling over ahead of 7.19.
  • Of course, the Asian currency rally mid-week on the HK government’s formal withdrawal of the extradition bill and confirmation of the resumption of US-China trade talks helped USD/China pull back. But even before then and despite US tariffs proceeding on Sunday on previously exempt imported Chinese goods, the daily USD/CNY fixings were firmly on the low side, much further below the spot close than we have seen for most of this year.
  • So the yuan is not being weaponized – in fact the opposite seems to be occurring. Whether this costs the PBoC much in FX reserves remains to be seen – the guidance may largely suffice to limit capital outflows.”

13:45
U.S.: Services PMI, August 50.7 (forecast 50.9)
13:44
USD/JPY: Multi-week risks remain below 105 – Westpac

Sean Callow, an analyst at Westpac, thinks that considerable bad news is arguably priced into USD/JPY but multi-week risks remain below 105.

  • “The US and China proceeded with new tariffs on each other’s imports and wires reported that President Trump had to be talked out of doubling tariffs. But as the week progressed the risk mood improved on the Hong Kong backdown over the extradition bill and confirmation of US-China trade talks in early October, with lower-level talks during September.
  • This left USD/JPY near the top of the past month’s ranges, though 107.00 could yet be a bridge too far. US yields are barely higher, with US data not supportive. Most dramatic was the slump in the ISM manufacturing index to below 50 but other releases have been little better, with the Atlanta Fed GDPNow estimate for Q3 down to 1.47% saar.
  • This should keep markets preparing for -25bp from the Fed on 18 Sep and a clearly dovish tone. The BoJ and MoF meanwhile have not indicated any policy change is looming.”

13:33
U.S. Stocks open: Dow +1.18%, Nasdaq +1.18% S&P +0.97%
13:31
Before the bell: S&P futures +0.93%, NASDAQ futures +1.20%

U.S. stock-index futures rose solidly on Thursday,  boosted by reports the United States and China agreed to hold high-level talks in October, raising hopes of a de-escalation in a trade war that has bruised global economic growth.


Global Stocks:

Index/commodity

Last

Today's Change, points

Today's Change, %

Nikkei

21,085.94

+436.80

+2.12%

Hang Seng

26,515.53

-7.70

-0.03%

Shanghai

2,985.86

+28.45

+0.96%

S&P/ASX

6,613.20

+60.20

+0.92%

FTSE

7,256.78

-54.48

-0.75%

CAC

5,594.22

+62.15

+1.12%

DAX

12,129.80

+104.76

+0.87%

Crude oil

$56.39


+0.23%

Gold

$1,544.50


-1.02%

13:02
Australia's growth slows to a post-GFC low – Standard Chartered

Chidu Narayanan, an economist at Standard Chartered, notes that Australia’s GDP growth slowed to a post-GFC low of 1.4% y/y in Q2 on slowing consumption and declining investment.

  • “While the trade surplus rose to an all-time high on elevated iron ore prices, we expect this source of support to fade substantially in H2 as exports decline from current highs.
  • Household consumption, which contributes c.55% of growth, is likely to edge lower in H2 on deteriorating labour-market conditions, subdued wage growth, declining consumer confidence and a soft property-market outlook. While government spending should take up some of the slack, we expect it to be insufficient to boost growth to trend levels. To reflect these headwinds, we lower our GDP growth forecasts for 2019 and 2020 to 1.7% (from 2.1%) and 2.2% (from 2.5%), respectively. We also revise down our inflation forecasts for both years, to 1.7% (from 2.0%) and 2.1% (from 2.2%).
  • We expect labour-market conditions to deteriorate sharply over the next few months as declining construction activity leads to significant job losses. We expect the unemployment rate to rise above 5.5%; this will weigh further on household consumption.
  • We expect two more 25bps rate cuts from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) in Q4 as growth slows further. However, we see them coming only in November and December given the RBA’s reluctance to cut rates.”

12:50
Target price changes before the market open

Walmart (WMT) target raised to $125 from $115 at Morgan Stanley

12:47
Wall Street. Stocks before the bell

(company / ticker / price / change ($/%) / volume)


3M Co

MMM

162.39

2.32(1.45%)

5363

ALCOA INC.

AA

18.5

0.22(1.20%)

3274

ALTRIA GROUP INC.

MO

44.5

0.20(0.45%)

8955

Amazon.com Inc., NASDAQ

AMZN

1,817.75

17.13(0.95%)

26798

American Express Co

AXP

119.71

1.31(1.11%)

1011

Apple Inc.

AAPL

211.6

2.41(1.15%)

206494

AT&T Inc

T

35.88

0.16(0.45%)

11938

Boeing Co

BA

359.4

2.87(0.81%)

10579

Caterpillar Inc

CAT

120.83

1.73(1.45%)

5182

Chevron Corp

CVX

117.4

0.15(0.13%)

1738

Cisco Systems Inc

CSCO

48.16

0.84(1.78%)

23481

Citigroup Inc., NYSE

C

65.6

1.32(2.05%)

32317

E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co

DD

69.4

0.92(1.34%)

1027

Exxon Mobil Corp

XOM

69.91

0.62(0.89%)

4627

Facebook, Inc.

FB

189.12

1.98(1.06%)

81039

FedEx Corporation, NYSE

FDX

161

1.94(1.22%)

1887

Ford Motor Co.

F

9.29

0.09(0.98%)

81472

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., NYSE

FCX

9.47

0.18(1.94%)

55846

General Electric Co

GE

8.96

0.16(1.82%)

302408

General Motors Company, NYSE

GM

38.5

0.64(1.69%)

10082

Goldman Sachs

GS

204.7

2.97(1.47%)

9256

Google Inc.

GOOG

1,194.80

13.39(1.13%)

3036

Hewlett-Packard Co.

HPQ

18.58

0.22(1.20%)

13650

Home Depot Inc

HD

226.02

1.87(0.83%)

8593

Intel Corp

INTC

49.89

0.97(1.98%)

89006

International Business Machines Co...

IBM

137.6

1.28(0.94%)

4555

International Paper Company

IP

38.72

0.06(0.16%)

120

Johnson & Johnson

JNJ

129.38

0.52(0.40%)

4798

JPMorgan Chase and Co

JPM

111.61

1.74(1.58%)

13535

McDonald's Corp

MCD

219.34

0.84(0.38%)

3448

Merck & Co Inc

MRK

86.38

0.33(0.38%)

8500

Microsoft Corp

MSFT

139.4

1.77(1.29%)

118954

Nike

NKE

87.25

0.90(1.04%)

4540

Pfizer Inc

PFE

36.01

0.18(0.50%)

10356

Procter & Gamble Co

PG

123.28

0.07(0.06%)

5366

Starbucks Corporation, NASDAQ

SBUX

96.6

0.49(0.51%)

10196

Tesla Motors, Inc., NASDAQ

TSLA

222.55

1.87(0.85%)

56599

The Coca-Cola Co

KO

55.81

0.04(0.07%)

13151

Twitter, Inc., NYSE

TWTR

43.77

0.41(0.95%)

108418

United Technologies Corp

UTX

132.5

1.45(1.11%)

1430

UnitedHealth Group Inc

UNH

228

1.27(0.56%)

4146

Verizon Communications Inc

VZ

58.42

0.24(0.41%)

3035

Visa

V

183.65

1.88(1.03%)

15706

Wal-Mart Stores Inc

WMT

116.76

0.85(0.73%)

8167

Walt Disney Co

DIS

138.85

0.96(0.70%)

8315

Yandex N.V., NASDAQ

YNDX

38.02

0.06(0.16%)

7558

12:45
Initiations before the market open

General Electric (GE) initiated with an Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; target $10

Lyft (LYFT) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank; target $70

12:44
Downgrades before the market open

Exxon Mobil (XOM) downgraded to Sell from Buy at Redburn

12:43
U.S. weekly jobless claims rise slightly more than expected

The data from the Labor Department revealed on Thursday the number of applications for unemployment benefits increased slightly last week, suggesting little impact on the labor market from ongoing trade tensions.

According to the report, the initial claims for unemployment benefits rose by 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 217,000 for the week ended August 31.

Economists had expected 215,000 new claims last week.

Claims for the prior week were revised upwardly to 216,000 from the initial estimate of 215,000.

Meanwhile, the four-week moving average of claims increased 1,500 to 216,250 last week.

12:30
U.S.: Continuing Jobless Claims, 1662 (forecast 1685)
12:30
U.S.: Initial Jobless Claims, 217 (forecast 215)
12:30
U.S.: Nonfarm Productivity, q/q, Quarter II 2.3% (forecast 2.2%)
12:30
U.S.: Unit Labor Costs, q/q, Quarter II 2.6% (forecast 2.5%)
12:27
U.S. private employers add 195,000 jobs in August - ADP

The employment report prepared by Automatic Data Processing Inc. (ADP) and Moody's Analytics showed on Thursday the U.S. private employers added 195,000 jobs in August. That was the biggest increase since April.

Economists had expected a gain of 149,000.

The increase for July was revised down to 142,000 from the originally reported 156,000.

“In August we saw a rebound in private-sector employment,” said Ahu Yildirmaz, vice president and cohead of the ADP Research Institute. “This is the first time in the last 12 months that we have seen balanced job growth across small, medium and large-sized companies.”

Meanwhile, Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “Businesses are holding firm on their payrolls despite the slowing economy. Hiring has moderated, but layoffs remain low. As long as this continues recession will remain at bay.”

12:23
ECB Draghi’s policies to continue and fiscal expansion to be pushed – Westpac

Tim Riddell, an analyst at Westpac, notes that the ECB president-elect Lagarde’s presentation to the EU Parliament indicated that she will continue Draghi’s policies and will also push for fiscal expansion within the region.

  • “Draghi’s indication of a concerted stimulus package at the ECB’s Sep appeared to be affirmed by ECB Governing Council members Lane and Rehn, but more hawkish members Knot, Weidmann and Lautenschlaeger have recently highlighted potentially deep divisions over further ECB stimulus.
  • Data into next week’s ECB meeting and the ability of Draghi to gain support for a swansong stimulus will be critical for both the handover to Lagarde and EUR.
  • Recent declines in global sentiment, expectations of ECB easing and veiled threats over US-EU trade have seen EUR/USD breach 1.10 support. If ECB credibility is affirmed, a new 1.08-1.12 range could develop.”

12:15
U.S.: ADP Employment Report, August 195 (forecast 149)
11:53
China vice premier Liu He: China has sufficient macro policy tools

  • China is fully capable, confident to deal with any difficulties
  • China's economy faces increasing downward pressure
  • China will increase lending to small and private firms
  • Will improve monetary policy transmission mechanism

11:37
Germany's factory orders drop twice as much as expected – TD Securities

Analysts at TD Securities note that the German factory orders were down 2.7% m/m in July, dropping twice as much as expected.

  • “The details showed shipments also down -1.0% during the month, and haven't posted a m/m gain since January. As as result we've downgraded our German IP forecast for tomorrow morning, and now look for a -1.0% m/m decline (mkt +0.4%).”

11:17
Focus on U.S. ADP employment and ISM non-manufacturing index – TD Securities

Analysts at TD Securities believe the release of the ADP report should give us the first look at employment data for August, with the consensus expecting a 148k print, somewhat below the 156k registered in July.

  • “The ISM non-manufacturing index is expected to advance modestly to 54.0 in August following two consecutive declines that have led the index to 53.7 — the lowest since 2016. This would come on the heels of a sharply lower ISM manufacturing print for August and would suggest the services sector remains largely healthy despite the worsening outlook for the industrial sector.”

10:57
Goldman Sachs' CFO Scherr: Germany is in the "early days of a slowdown" - CNBC

Goldman Sachs' Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Stephen Scherr told CNBC in an interview held in Frankfurt on Thursday that Germany's economy is in the “early days of a slowdown”.

“We are in the early days of a slowdown. I think that, you know, many of us and many economists can point to particular issues, whether it’s the automotive sector or the China trade issue that weigh on the German economy”, Scherr said.

10:36
UK PM's spokesman Slack says UK and EU had "constructive" talks yesterday

  • Does not agree with Barnier's assessment of Brexit talks
  • To continue talks again on Friday
  • Says PM Johnson wants an election before EU Council meeting

10:24
Australia's trade helps GDP avoid zero or even negative result – Westpac

Sean Callow, an analyst at Westpac, suggests that for Australia, the record A$20bn trade surplus helped GDP avoid a zero or even negative result.

  • It was stunning to see Australia report its first current account surplus since 1975, around 1% of GDP, with the trade surplus 4% of GDP.
  • Beyond that though, there wasn’t much to cheer. Growth over the year of 1.4% was the weakest since 2009 and slower than population growth. The growth drivers are a concern too, with private demand contracting – see chart. Business investment is falling, construction is yet to recover and consumer spending is up just 1.4%yr.
  • We can at least hope for better consumption data once the targeted tax cuts reach household bank accounts. And infrastructure activity should also pick up, as the RBA noted in its statement this week. It predicted growth would “strengthen gradually to be around trend over the next couple of years.
  • But this implies no real progress on lowering Australia’s unemployment rate and what the RBA terms the “trade and technology disputes” remain a major headwind, even if today brought a glimmer of hope as the US and China at least confirmed high-level trade talks in early October.
  • The RBA’s wary optimism, GDP data and more positive headlines on US-China trade helped AUD lead the G10 over the past week. It would be surprising if it can keep top spot in the week ahead.”

09:59
EU officials: Recent negotiations with UK is not going to lead anywhere - Reuters reports

  • Negotiations with David Frost are a waste of time
  • Barnier told EU 27 that Johnson is undermining Ireland's position on backstop
  • Barnier told EU 27 that UK risks crashing out without a deal by accident or by default
  • UK idea for a Brexit deal is a "heroic" assumption
  • Hard to see any Brexit deal passing in UK parliament currently
  • UK idea that EU 27 will eventually cave in is wrong
  • Ireland has maintained stance that cannot replace backstop with vague, non-binding and unclear commitments from the UK

09:41
GBP strength expected to be short-lived - ING

Petr Krpata, the cChief EMEA FX and IR strategist at ING, notes the pound has benefited from the mix of (a) the UK Parliament legislating against no deal Brexit by the 31 Oct deadline and (b) stretched short positioning. 

  • "Still with early elections looming (it now seems just a question of timing – i.e. before or after the October deadline), we expect GBP strength to be short-lived and the pound to soon re-start a weakening trend given the election uncertainty and non-negligible risk of a no-deal Brexit should the Conservative party under PM Boris Johnson win a Parliamentary majority. Indeed, recall the GBP price action earlier in the year, when GBP strengthened first on the hopes of the Article 50 extension (as is happening now) but eventually depreciated meaningfully as UK politics became even more fragmented and the risk of a no-deal Brexit rose. We look for a similar roadmap this time around."

09:17
GBP/USD: Large divergence of the daily RSI – Commerzbank

Karen Jones, an analyst at Commerzbank, notes that GBP/USD’s recent slide into 35-month lows was accompanied by a large divergence of the daily RSI.

  • “It also has not closed below 1.2000 and we have seen as sizeable bounce higher. Rallies will need to overcome the 55-day ma at 1.2343 – this protects the June high at 1.2784. Below 1.1958 (3rd September low) lies the 1.1491 3rd October low (according to CQG).
  • Only a rise above the June high at 1.2784 would indicate that a bottom is being formed (not favoured).”

08:57
German industrial data disappoint - ING

Carsten Brzeski, a chief economist at ING Germany, notes that industrial new orders dropped by 2.7% month-on-month in July from +2.7% MoM in June. 

  • "Industrial orders data has been highly volatile in recent months with bulk orders often blurring the picture. Excluding bulk orders, July industrial orders would have been up by 0.5% MoM. Still, the trend of industrial orders is anything but encouraging. Since the start of the year, industrial orders have dropped by an average of 1% MoM every month. Looking at the July data, both domestic and foreign orders dropped. Foreign orders from outside the eurozone fell by a dramatic 6.7% MoM, showing once again Germany’s exposure and sensitivity to the ongoing trade conflicts and increasing global uncertainty.
  • The development of industrial orders is a painful illustration of the downward trend of German industry over the last 1 ½ years. While industrial orders dropped by a monthly average of 0.4% MoM last year, the pace of the downswing actually accelerated this year with industrial orders having dropped by 1% MoM on average. What initially only looked like an order book deflation at high levels has become an industrial slump. Interestingly, this downward trend is not only driven by weaker foreign demand on the back of trade conflicts and increased uncertainty. Since the start of the year, domestic orders have actually dropped more than foreign orders, suggesting that global woes have reached the domestic economy.
  • Today’s data is the first hard data for the third quarter and it doesn't bode well at all. While tomorrow’s industrial production data could bring some relief and latest confidence indicators still point to weak but positive growth, the combination of shrinking order books and high inventories suggests that the industrial slump will not be over any time soon."

08:36
Australia records another immense trade surplus for July – ANZ

ANZ analysts note that Australia’s monthly trade balance continued to show strength, coming in at a AUD7,268m surplus in July.

  • “Underlying this was a 2.9% m/m increase in imports, offset to some extent by a 0.6% m/m gain for exports.
  • Resource exports grew, up 0.9% m/m in July. However, excluding gold, resources were down 3.6% m/m. The decline was largely driven by coal exports, which declined 9.4% for the month. Rural goods and manufacturing exports declined 1.1% and 1.4% respectively.
  • Capital goods imports were down 1.4% m/m, reflecting weakness in civil aircraft imports, which fell 35.8% in July, continuing the 45.8% m/m decline in June. Intermediate goods imports were up 5.1% m/m, led by fuel imports, which increased 13.7% m/m. The pick-up in imports likely reflects the recovery in oil prices in July after the lows in June. Consumption goods imports were up 4.5% m/m after falling 5.1% in June. Car imports, which rose 14.3% m/m, were a significant contributor.”

08:18
UK politics remain at the forefront – TD Securities

Analysts at TD Securities note that in the UK, MPs approved a bill mandating an Article 50 extension should they not agree to a deal by 19 October, and also rebuffed Boris Johnson's attempt to trigger a 15-October election.

  • “The Extension Bill heads to the House of Lords now for a final few days of showdown there. In a procedural tactic by the government, aimed at ambushing the bill, an amendment requiring Theresa May’s deal to be put to a vote yet again was also passed.”

08:09
AUD/USD rebound expected to move near 0.6830 – UOB

FX Strategists at UOB Group suggest the corrective recovery in AUD/USD has scope to move near the 0.6830 area.

  • "24-hour view: Our view yesterday was AUD “could advance further but expect strong resistance at 0.6800”. The expectation was not wrong as AUD touched 0.6801 before settling just below the high (closed at 0.6797). While the strong advance over the past two days appears to be ‘tiring’, there is room for AUD to edge higher from here. That said, a break of the solid 0.6825 resistance is unlikely. Support is at 0.6780 followed by 0.6760.
  • Next 1-3 weeks: We detected the weakened underlying tone… and cautioned that “only a NY closing below 0.6690 would suggest AUD could move to 0.6640”. AUD subsequently touched 0.6688 before soaring to end the day sharply higher at 0.6763 (+0.69%). The strong gain (largest 1-day rise in 3 weeks) coupled with the bounce from the strong 0.6690 level suggest AUD could be trying to form a bottom. That said, it is too early to expect a sustained up-move. For now, we view the price action as a ‘corrective rebound’ but there appears to be ample scope for AUD to test the strong 0.6825 resistance. Looking forward, if AUD were to register a NY close above 0.6850, it would indicate that last month’s low of 0.6678 is a more significant bottom than currently expected."

07:40
China's commerce ministry: China has no plans to withdraw WTO lawsuit on tariffs complaint
  • Says trade call with U.S. this morning went very well
  • Hopes that U.S. would stop putting pressure on Chinese companies
  • Reiterates that they firmly oppose escalation in the trade war
  • Says it will strive to achieve real progress during October trade talks
07:19
Trade to add to Australia's Q3 GDP – TD Securities

Analysts at TD Securities note that Australia’s trade surplus for July staged a small drop to A$7.268b from A$7.977b in June, the outcome essentially in line with expectations.

  • “Exports rose 1%, thanks to a +0.5% rise in service exports, offsetting partially some of the declines in iron ore exports -0.8% and 9% drop in coal exports.
  • Import values rose 2.9%/m, driven in part by higher consumption goods. The first print for the 3rd quarter suggests net trade should add to Q3 GDP but is unlikely to exceed the 0.6% pt contribution to Q2 GDP seen earlier this week.”

06:55
UK's PM Johnson to address the public today - ITV's political correspondent

PM is expected to speak later in the afternoon around 15:00 GMT.

06:47
Swiss economic growth slows

The State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) revealed on Thursday that Switzerland's gross domestic product (GDP) rose 0.3 percent q-o-q in the second quarter of 2019, after a revised 0.4 percent q-o-q growth in the previous quarter (originally a 0.6 percent q-o-q advance).

Economists had forecast the Swiss economy would expand by 0.2 percent q-o-q.

According to the report, private consumption rose by 0.3 percent q-o-q in the second quarter, supported by expenditure for healthcare, housing and energy. Meanwhile, government consumption edged up 0.1 percent q-o-q. Investment in construction registered a marginal drop of 0.1 percent q-o-q, while investment in equipment recorded a quite substantial decline of 1.0 percent. Exports of goods fell by 0.8 percent q-o-q, while imports of goods and services also dropped by 0.6 percent q-o-q.

In y-o-y terms, Swiss GDP grew by 0.2 percent in the second quarter, following a revised 1.0 percent advance in the first quarter (originally an increase of 1.7 percent). This represented the weakest growth since a 0.4 percent contraction in the fourth quarter of 2009 and was well below economists’ forecasts for a 0.9 percent gain.

06:20
German factory orders fall more than forecast in July

The Federal Statistical Office’s (Destatis) report revealed that new orders in the German manufacturing sector decreased by 2.7 percent m-o-m in seasonally terms in July, following an upwardly revised 2.7 percent m-o-m advance in June (originally a 2.5 percent m-o-m gain). That was the biggest monthly decline in factory orders since February.

Economists had forecast a drop of a 1.5 percent m-o-m.

According to the report, domestic orders fell by 0.5 percent m-o-m in July. Meanwhile, foreign orders declined by 4.2 percent m-o-m as a 0.3 percent m-o-m gain in new orders from the euro area was more than offset by a 6.7 percent m-o-m tumble in new orders from other countries.

New orders for intermediate goods decreased by 2.2 percent m-o-m in July, while orders for consumer goods dropped by 2.4 m-o-m and the orders for capital goods declined by 3.0 percent m-o-m.

06:05
Australia’s trade surplus narrows more than expected in July

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) announced on Thursday that Australia’s trade surplus in seasonally adjusted terms narrowed to AUD7.268 billion in July from a downwardly revised AUD7.977-billion surplus in June (initially a surplus of AUD8.036 billion).

Economists had expected a surplus of AUD7.400 billion.

According to the report, the exports increased 0.6 m-o-m in July, after jumping 1.4 percent m-o-m in June. Meanwhile, imports rose 2.9 percent m-o-m in July, following a 3.5 percent m-o-m drop in the prior month.

06:00
Germany: Factory Orders s.a. (MoM), July -2.7% (forecast -1.5%)
05:45
Switzerland: Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) , Quarter II 0.3% (forecast 0.2%)
05:45
Switzerland: Gross Domestic Product (YoY), Quarter II 0.2% (forecast 0.9%)
02:30
Commodities. Daily history for Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Raw materials Closed Change, %
Brent 60.14 3.81
WTI 55.81 3.85
Silver 19.56 1.66
Gold 1552.472 0.28
Palladium 1555.38 0.91
01:30
Australia: Trade Balance , July 7.268 (forecast 7.4)
00:30
Stocks. Daily history for Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Index Change, points Closed Change, %
NIKKEI 225 23.98 20649.14 0.12
Hang Seng 995.38 26523.23 3.9
KOSPI 22.84 1988.53 1.16
ASX 200 -20.4 6553 -0.31
FTSE 100 43.07 7311.26 0.59
DAX 114.18 12025.04 0.96
Dow Jones 237.45 26355.47 0.91
S&P 500 31.51 2937.78 1.08
NASDAQ Composite 102.72 7976.88 1.3
00:15
Currencies. Daily history for Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Pare Closed Change, %
AUDUSD 0.67949 0.6
EURJPY 117.357 0.98
EURUSD 1.10333 0.57
GBPJPY 130.271 1.79
GBPUSD 1.22494 1.39
NZDUSD 0.63553 0.45
USDCAD 1.32221 -0.86
USDCHF 0.98053 -0.62
USDJPY 106.351 0.41

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