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Opinion: Over the past few weeks we’ve watched most of the July economic news roll in.
The good news is that, in nearly all cases, July readings improved from frankly terrible June results. The less good news is that, despite this, most of these indicators remain at subpar levels indicative of an economy going backwards.
For the full picture, the chart below indexes most of the key monthly (“high frequency”) indicators so they can all be summarised on the one chart.
There’s a strong ‘dead cat bounce’ element in the mix. That is, June was so weak and/or holiday-affected that some relief was always likely for the following month. We’d put consents, card spending, the PMI, the PSI, job ads, and house sales in this category.
Nonetheless, the less-bad vibe in the data flow must still be taken as an encouraging sign given the disconcerting speed with which everything had been deteriorating since about February.
Moreover, some abatement in the two big fundamental downforces on the economy raises the odds we get a bit more relief in the numbers over coming months.
The latter point signals a more supportive demand backdrop for our primary exports in future. That’s encouraging, given still-challenging conditions in the rural sector. It would be a stretch to say firmer global demand is the main factor behind recent lifts in meat and dairy prices – they’ve been far more about tightening supply – but it has certainly helped.
Beef and lamb prices have increased 15-20 percent over the past four months, albeit in the case of the lamb to still very low levels. Dairy auction prices have maintained a wobbly uptrend and are now up 35 percent on a year ago. That’s allowed us to lift our 2024/25 Fonterra Milk Price forecast to $8.50 kg/ms. Relative to a $8.00 counterfactual, that would amount to an extra almost $1b in dairy sector income.
Combined, the okay-looking global backdrop, falling interest rates, and stabilising economic data flow, broadly play to the grain of our view we might be at the bottom of the business cycle around now. Call it ‘peak bad’. Our GDP forecasts continue to pencil in a slow return to economic growth from the final quarter of this year.
That may be so but, as ever, there are a couple of cautions to fold into the mix.
First, the hole that we are emerging from may end up being deeper than previously thought. We’re forecasting a cumulative GDP decline of 0.6% over the second and third quarters of this year. Various bottom-up and top-down indicators of short-term economic growth point to some residual downside risk on this view (Q2 GDP data released 19 September).
Second, the trudge up and out of the economic hole will feel like a slog for many. For one thing, the labour market will still be deteriorating – we’re still forecasting the unemployment rate to rise from 4.6% currently to 5.5% by March 2025. It then stays around there for the rest of next year.
So, while inflation worries may continue to retreat, the baton seems to be passing on to job insecurity. This can be seen, for example, in the unfortunately titled “misery index.” It’s an indicator of how households are experiencing the economy – produced by adding the unemployment rate and annual inflation rate together.
As the chart shows, the expected lift in unemployment stalls what might have otherwise been further falls in the index. Thankfully, it’s a lot lower than it was but, on our forecasts, looks set to remain at a more elevated level than the 2015-2019 period.
Pulling all of the threads together doesn’t change our expectation that the Reserve Bank (RBNZ) will keep trimming the Official Cash Rate in 25bps lumps in coming meetings.
A quickening in the pace of cuts at the next (October 9) announcement appears unlikely given the economic picture is no worse than the RBNZ’s August forecasts. A larger, 50bp cut in the final (November) meeting of the year is more of an open question, and something financial markets continue to fully price.
But the important thing – for the RBNZ and for most people – is that market interest rates are still falling. The pace of declines has slowed as expected, but the downtrend continues and looks to have further to run. Falling global interest rates, with the US Federal Reserve near certain to kick off its own easing cycle this month, may further fan the flames.
The OCR has only been lowered 25bps so far but retail rates have fallen much further given what’s been baked into expectations. One-year term deposit rates are now about 100bps below the peaks. Falls in 2-5 year fixed mortgage rates have been of a similar or larger magnitude while rates on shorter terms having fallen by a little less.
In our recent Property Pulse we laid out our view for mortgage rates and what this might mean for the housing market. In short, our OCR forecasts are consistent with a two-year mortgage rate close to 5 percent by the middle of next year (from just under 6 percent now). That is expected, with all the usual caveats around house price forecasting, to help drive a modest 7 percent lift in house prices over 2025, following a flat performance over the rest of this year.
But the question has been asked: what might all of that mean for housing affordability? After all, falling mortgage rates and potentially higher house prices work in opposing directions in an affordability sense.
The short answer is that all cases will be different. But for a general macro sense of the net effect we can run a few scenarios through our affordability index.
The index tracks the three core components of the housing affordability equation: the size of the required deposit, the cash required to service a mortgage, and the household incomes used to pay these bills. It estimates the average cost of a house deposit and first year of mortgage bills, all expressed as a multiple of the average household disposable income.[1]
The latest iteration shows:
[1] In practice, we assume a deposit of 20 percent of the median national house price. To this we add debt servicing costs in the first year (i.e. interest only), based on an 80 percent LVR and a 50/50 mix of floating and 2-year fixed mortgage rates, all expressed as a multiple of the average household disposable income. Technically, the discounted value of future debt servicing costs should be included, but we’ve simplified for ease of interpretation.
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