Independent Australian and global macro analysis

Friday, July 29, 2022

Macro (Re)view (29/7) | Inflation pressures growth

With the Federal Reserve indicating it will take a more data-dependent approach in hiking rates, weakness in US GDP saw markets taking greater confidence that rates won't reach the levels FOMC members expect, in turn supporting risk sentiment. This was despite US wage-price pressures showing no sign of easing in this week's data. Domestically, a softer-than-expected Q2 inflation report has seen markets settling on the RBA hiking by 50bps next week. 


Australian inflation was strong in the June quarter... 

Headline inflation was 1.8% in the June quarter, lifting the annual rate from 5.1% to 6.1%. Those outcomes were below market expectations, going against the run of play for upside surprises in global inflation prints, and markets responded by pricing out the chances of a 75bps RBA rate hike next week. Underlying inflation on the trimmed mean was 1.5% in the quarter, in line with consensus and Q1's outcome, as the annual pace elevated from 3.7% to 4.9%.


Overall, inflation in Q2 at 1.8% was a touch softer than in Q1 (2.1%) as petrol prices recorded a much more moderate increase this quarter due to the impact of the federal fuel excise tax cut. Another contributor was grocery prices rising at a slower pace after lifting very sharply in Q1; however, supply constraints associated with the recent foods and Covid disruptions mean price levels continued to increase. Meanwhile, new dwelling costs lifted further to be by around 20% over the year, with a large part of the increase reflecting the pass-through of higher materials and labour costs to consumers. Despite these cost escalations, consumer demand for new homes has been strong due to the support of construction subsidies and interest rate cuts following the onset of the pandemic. Reopening factors associated with international (19.9%q/q) and domestic travel (1.7%q/q) and rising prices for consumer durables due to strong demand, higher freight costs and supply chains pressures were also major contributors to quarterly inflation. For more on the Q2 CPI data see here 


... and consumer demand may be cooling 

Cost of living pressures and rising interest rates may be turning the screws on consumer demand as retail sales slowed to a 0.2% rise in June, its weakest outturn in 6 months with turnover growth softening sequentially in month-on-month terms over Q2. However, it is also clear that a rotation back to services is underway after the easing of Covid restrictions, so this could be contributing to weaker spending in durable goods that dominate retail sales (note the retail data do not include fuel). For Q2, nominal retail sales lifted sharply by 3.2% but next week's full release will be key as it will detail the price/volume split.   


Fed hiked rates by a further 75bps...

In the US, for the second meeting in succession, the Fed's FOMC met expectations delivering a 75bps rate hike, bringing the Fed Funds target range up to 2.25 - 2.5%. At the post-meeting press conference Chair Jerome Powell said that with the FOMC having made good on its pledge of "expeditiously" returning rates to a setting it considers to be in the neutral range, neither expansionary nor contractionary for economic activity, it would now move to a "meeting by meeting" approach to policy. Interpreted by markets as opening the door to a potential dialing down in the pace of rate hikes going forward, risk assets performed. 

That is somewhat surprising given Chair Powell made clear the focus was still very much on bringing down inflation and that the June summary of economic projections in which the median estimate for the terminal Fed Funds rate of 3.75 to 4% next year was still a good guide to where the FOMC believes policy needs to head. That comes as the Fed's preferred inflation gauge was above expectations for June, rising by 0.6% month-on-month and firming the annual pace from 4.7% to 4.8%. Meanwhile, the tight labour market pushed the employment cost index up by 1.3% in Q2 (vs 1.2% exp), indicating second-round effects from high inflation will continue to be closely monitored by the Fed.      


... as the US economy slows 

June quarter GDP was weaker than expected at -0.2%q/q following a 0.4%q/q contraction in Q1. Although net exports and inventories account for the largest part of those contractions, it is clear that domestic demand weakened sharply in Q2 (-0.1%) from Q1 (0.5%). Driving that slowdown was weakness in private investment (-3.6%q/q) and household consumption almost stalled over the quarter. Growth in real personal spending was 0.3% in Q2, down from 0.5% in Q1, with an increase in services consumption (1.0%) broadly offset by declining demand for goods (-1.1%). 


Euro area growth and inflation surprised to the upside

Despite euro area inflation coming close to hitting a 9% pace in July printing at 8.9%Y/Y and coming in stronger than expected (8.7%), second quarter GDP growth in the bloc at 0.7%q/q surprised well to the upside of consensus (0.2%). After growth of 0.5% in Q1, that left GDP up by 1.2% over the first half of the year, a surprisingly resilient outcome given the outlook has deteriorated significantly following the war in Ukraine, uncertainty over energy supply, household spending power squeezed by inflation and with the ECB now hiking rates.    


Alongside the rise in headline inflation, the core rate lifted from 3.7% to 4%Y/Y indicative of broadening price pressures beyond energy (39.7%Y/Y) and food (9.8%Y/Y). Goods inflation (ex-energy) (4.5%) continues to outpace services inflation (3.7%), though the latter is on the rise following the wider reopening of the sector.  
 

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Australian Q2 CPI 1.8%, 6.1%Y/Y

Australian inflation lifted to a 6.1% annual pace in the June quarter on the back of further rises in fuel, grocery and home building costs. Underlying inflation also lifted reflecting broad-based price rises across the CPI basket. The RBA is set to keep hiking rates at pace over the next couple of meetings. 

Consumer Price Index — Q2 | By the numbers 
  • Headline CPI was 1.8% in the June quarter — below the median estimate of 1.9% and softer than in Q1 (2.1%) — as the Y/Y pace lifted from 5.1% to 6.1% (vs 6.3% exp). Seasonally adjusted CPI printed at 1.7%q/q and 6.2%Y/Y.  
  • The underlying CPI measures came in around consensus in the quarter and lifted sharply over the year. 
    • Trimmed mean posted at 1.5%q/q — in line with expectations and Q1's outcome — elevating the annual rate up to a record high at 4.9% (vs 4.7% exp) from 3.7%.
    • Weighted median came in at 1.4% in the quarter (vs 1.5%), lifting to 4.2% over the year from 3%. 
    • CPI excluding 'volatile items' was a touch softer in Q2 at 1.6% than in Q1 (1.7%), though the annual pace elevated from 4% to 5.3%, its fastest since 2000.   



Consumer Price Index — Q2 | The details 

Inflation remained strong in the June quarter rising by 1.8%, though that was below market expectations and slower than Q1's 2.1% increase. Rising prices for fuel, groceries and the construction of new homes remained the major drivers of inflation in the quarter. Base effects drove the elevation in annual inflation from 5.1% to 6.1%, its fastest since the introduction of the national Goods and Services Tax in 2000.


Rising prices for fuel, groceries and the construction of new homes remained the major drivers of inflation in the quarter. These items represent just under one-quarter of the CPI basket by weight but account for around 70% of the rise in inflation over the past year. 


Inflation slowed over the quarter due mainly to the impact of the federal government's 50% cut to the fuel excise tax, effective from 30 March through to 28 September. The ABS reported the maximum effect on fuel prices was in April (-13.8%) but prices subsequently rose again in May (11.1%) and June (6.8%). Overall, fuel prices increased by 4.2% in the June quarter, down substantially from the 11% surge seen in Q1 after the onset of the war in Ukraine. Over the year, fuel prices lifted by 32.1%. 


Grocery price inflation, though still rising at a historically strong pace, was softer than in the March quarter. The pace of price increases slowed across several key items including: meat (0.8%q/q from 4.8% in Q1), dairy products (1.3% from 1.9%), non-alcoholic beverages (1.5% from 5.8%), non-durable household products (2.3% from 4.7%) and other products (1.1% from 2.8%).

Fruit and vegetable prices lifted by a further 5.8% in the quarter, in line with Q1's increase. Higher prices were being driven by supply disruptions associated with the east coast floods and Covid-related absences; rising input costs for fertiliser and transportation were also contributing. Bread prices were notably higher in Q2, up 3.1% from 1.8% in Q1, reflecting the constraint on global wheat supply from the war in Ukraine. Annual inflation in breads and cerals stepped up to 6.3%, its fastest since late 2008. 


New home building costs recorded another strong increase of 5.6% in the quarter, rising by 20.3% through the year. Shortages of building materials and skilled labour and the unwinding of the HomeBuilder subsidy scheme have all contributed to pushing up construction costs. Over the past year, price increases across the capital cities range from 15.8% in Sydney up to 30.2% in Brisbane.


In the Covid-affected categories, international travel costs picked up sharply in the quarter (19.9%) as strong demand following the easing of border restrictions was met by limited airline capacity. Voucher schemes in New South Wales and Victoria were moderating the pace of price rises in domestic travel (1.7%) and dining out (1.4%), with those services seeing strong demand over the Easter holiday period. 


Overall, Australian inflation remains heavily weighted to goods components (2.6%q/q, 8.4%Y/Y) than services categories (0.6%q/q, 3.3%Y/Y). Goods inflation is running substantially faster due largely to issues in global supply chains over the course of the pandemic and more recently accentuated by the war in Ukraine and China's return to lockdowns. The slower pace of services inflation can be linked to wage growth that is yet to reflect the strength of labour market and due to the impact of government policy decisions that have limited out-of-pocket costs. Inflation from rents also remains subdued (1.6%Y/Y), lagging the tightening in vacancy rates. 


Consumer Price Index — Q2 | Insights 

Today's report defied the global trend of inflation data continually surprising to the upside of expectations, with headline inflation slowing in Q2 to come in below the median estimate. That likely reduces the need for the RBA Board to hike rates by more than the 50bps discounted into market pricing ahead of the August meeting. With underlying inflation on the trimmed mean rising to 4.9% nearly double the midpoint of the 2-3% target band and the cash rate assessed by the RBA as sitting well below the neutral range, a fourth consecutive 50bps rise looks on the cards in September as well.    

Preview: Australian Q2 CPI

Australia's June quarter inflation report is due to be published by the ABS at 11:30am (AEST) today. Rising price pressures drove headline and underlying inflation above the top of the RBA's target band for the first time since 2008 in the March quarter, prompting the Board to hike interest rates by a total of 125bps since the previous CPI report. With further rate hikes in the pipeline, today's report will be a key input in the Board's assessment of the scale and pace of tightening required over the coming months. 

As it stands CPI 

For the first time in 13 years, annual inflation on both a headline and trimmed mean basis is above the RBA's 2-3% target band. Headline inflation was 2.1% in the March quarter, lifting the annual rate to 5.1%. Broadening price pressures across the CPI basket pushed up the trimmed mean measure by 1.4% in the quarter to be 3.7% higher over the year.


Fuel and the construction of new dwellings remained major drivers of the CPI in the March quarter and rising food prices emerged as a new inflationary impulse. Constraints in global refining capacity and the war in Ukraine were pushing up prices for petrol and a broad range of commodities. Rising fertiliser prices, higher transportation costs and disruptions to supply due to the impacts from Covid and adverse weather were key factors contributing to rising food prices. Housing construction costs were up sharply again in Q1 as capacity constraints in the sector were leading to higher costs for materials and labour. Developers' base prices for new homes were rising due to fewer government HomeBuilder grants now being paid out after the scheme closed to new applicants in the first half of 2021. 


Global factors are predominantly driving the pick-up in inflation in Australia. Inflation in the tradable components was 2.9% in the quarter and 6.8% over the year, its fastest pace on record. Domestic sources have become a more pronounced driver of inflation over the past year, though at 4.2%Y/Y the pace is more modest.


As has been seen in many other comparable economies, Australian inflation has been led by rising goods prices as strong demand has run up against constraints in global supply chains. Services inflation lifted more noticeably in the March quarter (1.1%), but goods components continued to contribute far more substantially to overall inflation.


 
Market expectations CPI

The median estimate on the headline CPI is 1.9% for the quarter; however, the range of estimates is very wide from 1.6% on the low side to 2.8% on the high side. Annual inflation is forecast to rise from 5.1% to 6.2%, which would be its highest since Q4 1990. 


Broadening price pressures are set to see a further pick-up in underlying inflation. Quarterly inflation is expected to come in at 1.5% on both the trimmed mean and weighted median measures. That would see annual inflation rising from 3.7% to 4.7% on the trimmed mean and from 3.2% to 4.3% for the weighted median.  

What to watch CPI 

Most of the attention will centre around where headline inflation prints relative to the expected outcomes. Upside surprises would likely see markets pricing in a greater chance of a 75bps RBA rate hike in August, with a 50bps hike already fully discounted. Given the nature of inflation (with a few components making very large contributions), the underlying measures will be more impactful for the RBA. With today's report in hand, the RBA will revise its inflation forecasts ahead of next week's meeting. The current expectation is that trimmed mean inflation will peak in Q4 at 4.6%, though that estimate will be lifted. Depending on today's outcomes, the forecast peak could be lifted to around 5%, double the midpoint of the target band. Indications from Governor Lowe last week were that the RBA was looking to return rates to a 'neutral' setting (which it estimates roughly at 2.5% in nominal terms). In light of that and with the cash rate at 1.35%, the RBA looks set to keep hiking at pace for at least the next couple of meetings.   

Friday, July 22, 2022

Macro (Re)view (22/7) | ECB draws line in the sand

An important week has passed with the ECB making its stand on inflation and in backstopping fragmentation risk. The Fed will have its say next week but as central banks remain focused on bringing down inflation, markets are likely to focus on growth risks given the contractionary readings in the July PMIs in the US and euro area.   


ECB hikes rates; announces new transmission tool 

With headline inflation running at 8.6%Y/Y in June and the core rate confirmed at 3.7%Y/Y, "undesirably high" inflation prompted the ECB to hike rates for the first time in 11 years this week. The reports in the days prior to the meeting proved correct as the Governing Council went against its earlier guidance to deliver a larger hike of 50bps to its 3 key rates instead of 25bps. The particular significance of 50bps is that it lifts the depo rate (rate paid on banks' overnight deposits) straight back to 0%, accelerating the exit from a 7-year period of negative settings. It has also meant that the ECB has thrown in the towel on forward guidance on future interest rate moves, with the statement noting it will now take decisions on a "meeting-by-meeting" and data-dependent approach. President Christine Lagarde was clear at the press conference that "further normalisation" of rates is to be expected at upcoming meetings; however, the window for those hikes could be closing given a deteriorating growth backdrop as the euro area's composite PMI fell into contraction in July.   


In what has generally been viewed as a compromise solution, the council has agreed to a larger rate hike upfront given the inflation situation while the dovish members have secured the addition of the  Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI) to the ECB's toolkit. The TPI will stand as a backstop to guard against "disorderly market dynamics" interfering in the implementation of the ECB's monetary policy stance. The widening of Italian yield spreads following the collapse of its government appears unlikely to be viewed in this context. That being said, the accompanying release clearly leaves the ECB with a large degree of discretion to determine what would activate asset purchases under the TPI, while it says the size of such purchases is "not restricted ex ante". 

All euro area countries can qualify for TPI support if the ECB deems it appropriate, though some conditionality has been attached to that commitment, relating mainly to complying with existing EU fiscal rules and having "sound and sustainable"macroeconomic policies in place. Regardless of the formulation of the TPI, the ECB asserts that its "first line of defence" in preventing what it sees as an unwarranted widening of yield spreads will be to use the flexibility it has built into the reinvestment phase (which it is now in) as bond purchased in the PEPP (pandemic-related) program mature. PEPP holdings stand at 1.7tn and the ECB has committed to a reinvestment phase through to the end of 2024 at the least. 

Rising inflation risks a more aggressive BoE 

UK inflation surprised to the upside of expectations to print at 9.4%Y/Y in June. The peak is not likely to come in until later in the year as there is another increase in household energy prices coming through in October, and when it does the Bank of England anticipates inflation will be running above 10%. Meanwhile, the core rate matched estimates in easing from 5.9% to 5.8%Y/Y. 


When taken with the inflation data, this week's report on the labour market may well bring the BoE round to market pricing, which anticipates a step up to a 50bps rate hike in August after a series of smaller increases. A speech from BoE Governor Andrew Bailey confirmed that a 50bps hike will be under consideration at the next meeting, with the emphasis being around guarding against high inflation becoming entrenched by feeding through to the wage setting process. The UK labour market looks robust, with the unemployment rate holding at 3.8% in May and remaining below its pre-Covid level. Demand for labour is strong, highlighted by employment rising by a stronger-than-expected 296k for the most recent 3-month period while job vacancies - despite softening over the quarter - are also very elevated. With labour supply in the UK being restricted by the effects of Covid, a tight labour market has pushed up annual earnings growth to 4.3% compared to a pre-Covid pace of around 3%. 

RBA ponders neutral rates in Australia 

Since the May meeting when the RBA started hiking rates, its justification has been that the economic conditions no longer require emergency support and it has been in the process of normalising monetary policy. Assuming normalising means returning the cash rate to a so-called neutral setting (neither expansionary or contractionary for economic activity), the July meeting minutes showed the Board had a preliminary discussion around what this level might be. The key observations were that the cash rate was "well below" estimates of the neutral rate and that if inflation expectations were to shift upwards then more rate hikes would be needed to return inflation to the target band than otherwise.  

A speech by Governor Philip Lowe gave further insights, with RBA research tentatively suggesting the real rate of interest was positive. If inflation expectations are anchored at the midpoint of the 2-3% target, Governor Lowe said that would imply a neutral nominal cash rate of "at least 21⁄2 per cent". Building on analysis from the Financial Stability Review, Deputy Governor Michelle Bullock said household finances were well positioned to cope with the current tightening cycle. Next week sees the focus centred on the Q2 inflation report where the median estimate for headline CPI is 6.2%Y/Y and 4.7%Y/Y on the trimmed mean. Market pricing points to a 50bps rate hike in August, with only a small chance being given to a surprise 75bps increase. 

Friday, July 15, 2022

Macro (Re)view (15/7) | More upside surprises

An upside surprise on the key data point of the week took US inflation through 9%Y/Y in June, confirming the Fed and its global peers will remain hawkish for the foreseeable future. The Bank of Canada hiked aggressively by 100bps outdoing expectations for 75bps, while the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and Bank of Korea both hiked by 50bps. Growth concerns remained in focus in Europe, not helped by the slowdown in Chinese GDP from 4.8%Y/Y to 0.4%Y/Y (vs 1.2% expected) as Covid lockdowns returned in Q2.    


Strength to strength in the Australian labour market...

A strong labour force report for June was headlined by the national unemployment rate coming in from 3.9% to 3.5% (vs 3.8% expected), re-establishing a new low for the cycle dating back to 1974 (full review here). Employment has ramped up significantly rising by 88.4k in June (vs 30k expected) following the 60.6k increase in May. This came after a slowdown over March-April, impacted by the east coast floods and the Easter holiday period. The acceleration in employment is more in line with the underlying momentum in the economy and the high levels of job vacancies point to further gains. Encouragingly, strong labour demand has again seen the participation rate resetting to a new record high of 66.8%. 


Wages growth was still subdued as of Q1 (2.4%Y/Y), but the labour market conditions are set to see the pace lift in coming quarters. However, record high participation is a key reason why we should not see the sort of escalation in domestic wage pressures to the extent that the US and UK have experienced. While there is now speculation the RBA could speed up to hiking rates by 75bps at the August meeting, I stick with 50bps for now seeing the upcoming Q2 CPI data as the more influential factor for the Board. 

... but cost of living concerns weigh on sentiment 

Concerns around cost of living pressures and rising interest rates continue to far outweigh confidence in the labour market as the Westpac-Melbourne Institute Index of consumer sentiment fell by a further 3% in July to be close to the lows seen during previous economic downturns. The scale of the decline seen over 2022 (-19.6%) has been striking, though it has run counter to the economic conditions, with the spending data particularly strong. Business confidence in the NAB survey for June also fell sharply to a below average level. In contrast, the measures of current trading conditions are very strong, as are the outlook components in forward orders and employment intentions.

Another upside surprise on US inflation...

Annual headline inflation in the US printed with a 9 handle (9.1%) for the first time since 1981 after the increase in the month-month CPI came in at 1.3% in June, stronger than the 1.1% lift expected. The core rate (excludes food and energy) was posted at 0.7%m/m, also above the median estimate (0.5%), with the annual pace fading for the 4th month running, now at 5.9% (vs 5.7% expected) from 6.5% in March.


Supply constraints affected by refining capacity and the war in Ukraine saw gasoline prices surging in the month (11.2%, 59.9%Y/Y), driving the outcome for headline inflation. Further rises for food (1%m/m, 10.4%Y/Y) and shelter (0.6%m/m, 5.6%Y/Y) again underscored the cost of living pressures US households are facing. The inflationary pulse coming from services (ex-energy) continues to increase (0.7%m/m, 5.7%Y/Y), a concerning development given that price rises in these categories tend to be stickier than in goods. Speaking of goods, with last year's price surges continuing to fall out of the annual calculation, inflation in durables fell by 3ppts to 8.4%Y/Y, albeit with June's outcome (0.7%m/m) surprising after several weak prints.  

... leads to speculation of even faster Fed rate hikes 

The idea that the Fed could follow the BoC and hike rates by 100bps later this month gained some traction in the markets post the CPI data. Comments from Fed officials Waller and Bullard pushed back against those calls, with both in support of another 75bps rate hike. Governor Waller said a larger hike could be on the radar if supported by other data, including this week's retail sales report. That report showed June retail sales were strong, with headline (1.0%m/m), core (0.7%m/m) and control group sales (0.8%m/m) all above expectations, more than rebounding from weak outcomes in May. There are varying interpretations of June's outturns given that retail sales include the inflationary component from rising prices, but at the end of the day, the data shows nominal spending is rising not falling. 


Deteriorating outlook sees the euro breach parity 

The summer economic forecasts published by the European Commission predicting slower growth and higher inflation are headwinds that saw the single currency breach parity to the US dollar for the first time in 20 years this week. Forecast growth in the euro area for 2022 was revised down to 2.6% from 2.7% while the growth outlook in 2023 was cut from 2.3% to 1.4%. It is fair to say markets are significantly more pessimistic on prospects than those forecasts, due in part to uncertainty around whether Russia will turn the energy taps back on once the Nord Stream 1 pipeline reopens from maintenance works. 

In response to that risk, European natural gas prices have risen sharply, adding not only to growth concerns but also to the inflation outlook. The Commission raised its 2022 inflation forecast to 7.6% from 6.1% and to 4.3% from 2.7% in 2023. This all comes ahead of next week's ECB meeting where the Governing Council is expected to stick to its prior guidance and hike rates by 25bps. 

Over in the UK, the monthly GDP estimate for May was stronger than expected at 0.5%, rebounding from a contraction in April (-0.2%). The production (0.9%) and construction sector (1.5%) both expanded but it was a 0.4% rise in services output that drove the headline increase, led by a large rise in GP appointments. The weak point was a 0.1% fall in consumer services, suggesting that cost of living pressures were weighing on household spending. Although mainly of academic interest, a speech by BoE Governor Bailey discussed the structural drivers that have been pushing down interest rates over recent decades, arguing they are likely to limit the ability of central banks to raise rates unless reversed.  

Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Australian employment 88.4k in June; unemployment falls to 3.5%

Surging employment lowered Australia's unemployment rate sharply to 3.5% in June to post at a new low dating back to 1974 as the participation rate increased to a new record high of 66.8%. Despite the disruptions to businesses caused by staff absences due to Omicron and the flu, hours worked still lifted strongly over the June quarter.    

Labour Force Survey — June | By the numbers
  • Employment surged above expectations rising by 88.4k in June (vs 30k expected), lifting from a 60.6k increase in May.
  • Australia's unemployment rate fell from 3.9% to 3.5% (vs 3.8% expected), its lowest since August 1974. Underemployment ticked up by 0.3ppt to 6.1%, leaving total labour force underutilisation steady at its 40-year low of 9.6%.  
  • The participation rate reset to a new record high, rising from 66.7% to 66.8%. The national employment to population ratio increased 0.3ppt to 64.4%, also a record.
  • Hours worked were flat in the month, held back by high staff absences, but were up sharply over Q2 (4.6%). 





Labour Force Survey — June | The details

Australia's unemployment rate has fallen to a new low for the cycle, declining sharply from 3.9% in May to 3.5% in June. This is its lowest level since August 1974 and compares to the peak of 7.5% it hit during the national lockdown in 2020.


Employment increased by a multiple of the expected outcome rising by 88.4k in June, increasing from the strong outcome in May (60.6k). Full time employment increased by a further 52.9k (now up by 359.9k over the first half of 2022) and continued to drive the headline rise in employment. Part time employment, however, increased by 35.5k, its strongest rise in 7 months (down 63.5k in 2022). 


Although employment slowed during March-April, the momentum has re-accelerated, consistent with the high level of job vacancies, increasing hours, and the underlying strength in the economy. These factors have supported the rotation to full time employment. For Q2 overall, employment lifted by more than 7%q/q to 153.5k. Employment is now 4.6% above pre-Covid levels. 


With employment surging, the participation rate has again reset to a new record high at 66.8%. Meanwhile, the share of the working-age population in work now stands at 64.4%, an increase of around 2ppts from pre-Covid levels.  


Hours worked came in flat in June, remaining at 4.9% above their pre-Covid level. This came after increases of 1.3% in April and 0.9% in May, resulting in a 4.6% surge in Q2 that will drive a strong Q2 GDP result. This is a highly impressive rebound from Q1 where total hours fell by 1%, impacted by the Omicron wave and the east coast floods. 


June's weakness in hours worked looks to have been held back by the continuing disruptions caused by staff absences due to Omicron and the flu and for caregiving reasons. Combined, these factors saw more than 1.1 million Australians working fewer hours than usual in June, a similar level to May. 


Driven by the flat outcome for hours worked in June, there was a slight uptick in the underemployment rate, from 5.7% to 6.1%, while underutilization in the labour force held steady at its 40-year low of 9.6%. 


Labour Force Survey — June | Insights

Australia's unemployment rate fell sharply to 3.5% as the participation rate lifted to a new record high. Employment has surged over May-June, defying assessments that hiring was slowing over March-April. The high level of job vacancies should continue to support a further tightening in the labour market. The strength of today's report has prompted calls for a larger rate hike from the RBA than the 50bps increase expected. However, I see the upcoming Q2 CPI report as more likely to be the catalyst for the RBA to step up the pace of its next increase. 

Preview: Labour Force Survey — June

Australia's Labour Force Survey for June is scheduled for release at 11:30am (AEST) today. Conditions in the labour market strengthened in May, with the unemployment rate close to a 50-year low as the participation rate increased to a record high. Employment re-accelerated after a recent slowdown and elevated levels of job vacancies indicate the momentum can continue. A strong report would further back calls for a third consecutive 50bps RBA rate hike in August. 

As it stands | Labour Force Survey

Conditions in the Australian labour market continued to strengthen in May. Employment increased by 60.6k in the month to come in well above the consensus estimate (25k), re-accelerating after slowing in April (4.4k). This kept the national unemployment rate at the 48-year low of 3.9% as the participation rate elevated to a record high at 66.7%. Underemployment fell from 6.1% to 5.7%, reducing total underutilisation in the labour force to its lowest in 40 years at 9.6%.


The strong labour market continues to drive full time employment, increasing by a further 69.4k in May, taking its rise since the turn of the year to above 300k. Part time employment was down by 8.7k in May, extending the decline to 99k year to date. Rising hours worked and very high levels of job vacancies have supported this rotation away from the part time segment to full time employment. 


Hours worked increased by 0.9% in May, rising to be almost 5% above pre-Covid levels. However, ongoing disruptions related to Omicron remained a headwind. The number of people away from work due to illness surpassed the previous peak in January, while caregiving-related absences also surged in the month. 


Market expectations | Labour Force Survey

The market expects a 30k rise in employment in June, with estimates ranging between -10k and +45k. Employment underperformed expectations between March and April with hiring slowing down due to the east coast floods and over the Easter holiday period. May's resurgent outcome (60.6k) brought the 3-month average to 30k, the expected figure today. With job vacancies as high as they are and hours worked sharply above pre-Covid levels, I see the risks as being to the upside for employment in June. Such an outcome would help generate the expected decline in the unemployment rate from 3.9% to 3.8% (range: 3.7% to 4%).      


What to watch | Labour Force Survey

All indications are that the labour market will tighten further through the back half of the year. Another strong report today would be consistent with that outlook and firm up expectations for another 50bps rate hike from the RBA in August. With these being the strongest labour market conditions in many years, wage pressures are building. I, therefore, continue to watch the participation rate closely, encouraged by the rise to a record high in May. This is a vastly different situation to many other countries where participation has fallen over the pandemic. I expect this to be one key that will prevent the degree of acceleration in wage pressures seen in the US and UK in particular.   

Friday, July 8, 2022

Macro (Re)view (8/7) | All not lost

A better week for risk sentiment as equities broadly reversed last week's declines. This was supported by strong US data that indicated recession fears have been overdone and gives the Fed the green light to hike by 75bps later this month. 


RBA hikes rates by a further 50bps 

The RBA met expectations by hiking its key interest rates by 50bps this week, taking the cash rate target to 1.35% and the Exchange Settlement rate to 1.25%. A detailed review of the July meeting is available here, but the key points in Governor Philip Lowe's statement related to keeping inflation expectations anchored between the 2-3% target with the strength of domestic demand putting pressure on the supply side of the economy. This focus looks consistent with another 50bps hike in August post the next CPI report, with that data likely to prompt the RBA to again raise its forecast for peak inflation later in the year (currently at 7%). 

While markets are priced for the RBA to keep hiking at every meeting through to the end of the year to bring the cash rate to around 3%, my estimate sits just above 2% which factors in the RBA pausing in September ahead of hiking at a slower pace later in the year. Recent comments from Governor Lowe have highlighted that the RBA's arrangement of monthly meetings allows for a graduated response to countering the risks to the inflation outlook, particularly noting the flexibility built into the inflation target, defined as a medium-term average of between 2-3%. Three successive 50bps hikes could be seen by the Board as finding the right balance between moving ahead of a rising inflation outlook without overdoing the scale of tightening in the near term. The Board noted it will be attentive to the outlook for inflation and in the labour market and also to developments in the global economy where prospects are increasingly uncertain. 

Record trade surplus headlined Australian data in May 

A surge in the trade surplus to a record high of $16bn was the standout data point this week (see here). The nation's trade surplus was already at elevated levels at the beginning of the year but has subsequently doubled on the back of the escalation in commodity prices following the Ukraine war. Housing data defied expectations for weak outcomes as new finance commitments lifted by 1.7%m/m (see here) and dwelling approvals posted a 9.9%m/m rise (see here). Meanwhile, ongoing strength in retail sales, up 0.9%m/m, underscored the resilience of spending to weak sentiment (see here).      


No let-up from the Fed...

The minutes from the Fed's meeting in mid-June made clear no let-up was in sight, putting a hike of "50 or 75 basis points" on the table for its meeting later this month as the FOMC signalled its intent to drive rates up into restrictive territory for economic activity. Markets are priced for a 75bps hike in July and comments from Governor Waller and St. Louis Fed President Bullard this week supported that assessment. The FOMC was also clear that the intent behind tighter monetary policy was to slow demand to be in closer alignment with a constrained supply side of the economy, an imbalance currently contributing to the high rate of inflation. 

... as the US labour market remains strong  

Markets took a strong labour market report for June as a green light for the Fed to hike by 75bps. Despite growth concerns in the US, the labour market continues to perform as nonfarm payrolls posted a 372k rise in the month, printing well above the consensus forecast of 268k. Employment increased by 1.1m over Q2, down from 1.6m in Q1 but still a very solid outcome. The unemployment rate held at 3.6% for the 4th month in succession, though the broader underemployment measure came in from 7.1% to 6.7%, a record low. The disappointment remains on the supply side with the participation rate ticking down from 62.3% to 62.2%, which is around 1ppt down on pre-pandemic levels. The constraint of lower participation as employment has recovered from the pandemic is reflected in the step-up in average hourly earnings growth to above 5%Y/Y compared to its pre-Covid pace that struggled to rise much higher than 3%Y/Y.   


BoE's Financial Stability Report highlighted risks from high inflation 
 
Although politics dominated the headlines in the UK, it was also a busy week at the Bank of England. The Bank's latest Financial Stability Report noted that a persistence of high inflation risked economic growth prospects, tighter financial conditions and increased volatility in markets. The key risks are around the war in Ukraine and in China from both its Covid response and in the deleveraging in the property sector. Noting that the economic outlook had "deteriorated materially", the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) judged that the banking sector was well placed to act as a support to UK households and businesses rather than amplify the shock in the event of a downturn. However, to enhance resilience, the FPC confirmed the rate for banks' countercyclical capital requirements would rise from 1% to 2%, effective from July next year. 

Also of note from the BoE this week was a speech by Chief Economist Huw Pill. In the speech, Pill said the Monetary Policy Committee's reaction function centred on preventing an upward rise in inflation expectations. There is concern that imported inflation could become more entrenched domestically if UK corporates try to offset the squeeze on profit margins through persistent price increases, a situation that would encourage workers to push for higher wages to compensate for the increased cost of living. Pill outlined that the MPC's policy guidance has been calibrated to give it a high degree of flexibility to either speed up or back off from tightening in light of the very uncertain outlook, characterised by crosscurrents from high inflation in the near term against the potential for disinflationary impulses to emerge further out.  

ECB weighs up 25bps and 50bps  

The key message taken from the account of the ECB's meeting in early June was that there had been support from some Governing Council members to commence hiking rates by more than the 25bps increase currently guided. Faced with a negative terms of trade shock caused by surging energy prices following the war in Ukraine and also being exposed to the spillover impacts from China's lockdowns, the rapidly deteriorating growth outlook has led to the view that the ECB's window to hike and move away from negative rates is closing. 

It is possible the ECB could up its first hike to 50bps later this month, but the question is whether enough members have seen something since June to shift the consensus. June's account revealed that the consensus for a 25bps hike was made on the basis of wanting to start with a modest increase and with longer-term inflation expectations still anchored at the 2% target. The further weakening in the euro to 20-year lows against the US dollar may constitute a material change that prompts a reassessment but for now, 25bps looks the way forward.