Economic Outlook
Temporary shipping delays caused by the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic – leading to shortages of products across New Zealand industries – are likely to continue until the end of the year, experts say.
Supply chain issues are affecting pet food supplies, the automotive repair and hardware industries, vehicle imports and building supplies.
Shipping delays were definitely affecting the automotive repair industry, Pit Stop Dunedin franchise owner Daniel Cresswell said.
It was particularly difficult to get vehicle parts from Asia through the dealership process, and he faced delays of up to 12 weeks for some items.
“We had a client who failed a warrant of fitness on an LED light for a wing mirror, a non-repairable part, and we were told 12 weeks for a new one to arrive,” Cresswell said.
“And we have been told that for numerous parts, especially out of Japan, when it normally takes only two weeks.”
Electronic automotive parts, such as devices to interface between a car’s wiring and a trailer, were hard to get because of a worldwide shortage of silicon chips, he said.
Cresswell said there were challenges with the supply of automotive oils and fluids in New Zealand as well.
“That’s something that could become a big problem – some industries use a massive amount of oil,” he said… CLICK for the complete article
“A ship in harbour is safe, but that is not what ships are for..”
This morning: There are plenty of positive news stories emerging as the global economy reopens, but also an increasing number of real-world tangible threats emerging. The Pandemic has affected economies from top to bottom, and many issues won’t be resolved overnight. For markets the issues to consider aren’t just inflation or market bubbles, but how supply chain issues and instability could continue to impact sentiment.
The ongoing Covid horrors in India, and yet more negative politics noise is dominating the new screens, but the global economy is reopening fast. Ignore the doomsters and focus on the reality… the global economy is open, and that means a host of new supply chain, logistics and market pricing crises to worry about! Yay!
This morning there is plenty of positive news. South Korea’s economy posted brisk Q1 growth after a shocking 2020. The Germans have lifted their expectations for 2021 growth to 3.5% and 3.6% in 2022 on the back of recovery. (Wow, if even Europe is recovering, there must be hope.) The UK’s Confederation of Industry (CBI) is ultra-positive, reporting the sharpest upturn since 2018 in sales as the British economy reopens. There is equally positive news from around the planet.
Of course, there will always be problems – like the rumours of a planned right- wing coup in France (a number of retired generals apparently hankering for a repeat of the Algeria crisis). Or how about yet more allegations of Tory Sleaze…? Yawn! (If you voted for Boris on the basis of his integrity, then more fool you..) The Biden Tax hikes are getting all kinds of attention, and could impact market sentiment – although its largely a case of outraged Libertarians disbelieving the temerity of a President daring to propose they pay their fair-share.
But these political events are all intangibles. There is plenty of real stuff we should focus on in markets.
Housing
US Home Prices (aye, remember them….) surged 12% in February. That’s the biggest jump since 2006… which is one year before things went to hell in a handbasket on the back of a US housing bubble driven by over-easy money.. Hmmmm.. housing boom, easy money? What’s that ding-ding-ding sound in the back of my head?
There are some really interesting trends in the US homes data – like the hottest property areas are up in the Rocky Mountains. The median US home gained $36k over the last year. Prices rose in all the 20 major US cities covered by the Case-Shiller indiex – Phoenix, San Diego and Seattle were top performers.
The gains in US homes – and here in the UK – is fuelled on the same old reasons – lack of supply, FOMO fears of missing out and being unable to get the ladder, and now on folks moving to find better places to live than dirty old cities if they can work from home The pandemic has allowed home buyers to build up savings, and the home market is an obvious place to put it – especially when interest rates are so low.
Bingo! That’s the danger: more money chasing a limited number of assets! Home prices are being fuelled on a relative interest rate effect. The gains from housing look much more attractive than savings, so folk are borrowing more (at ultra-low rates) to spend on housing. A boom is fuelling a boom. Home prices are suffering from similar distortions as we’ve seen drive financial asset prices (stocks and shares)!
Dare I suggest a bubble is forming in home prices? Someone is bound to tell me not to worry – house prices always rise…. Don’t they?
Global Shipping and Inventory
t’s not just semiconductor chips that are in short-supply. As the blockage in the Suez demonstrated, its shipping and the logistics involved to get goods to consumers that enables spending. Get it wrong, or de-stablise the process, and the whole global economy goes into shock. If the Chinese want to administer a coup-de-grace to the Western Economy, then hacking Amazon into shut-down would be a place to start.
Over the last few months we’ve seen container ship box rates balloon up to 4x higher – but speaking to a ship broker yesterday he believes rates will normalise. That may change on any geopolitical instability, but rates will largely depend on levels of global inventory.
There is genuine scarcity of chips, which is being addressed by new production. There is also scarcity of goods that were in high demand through the pandemic – for instance, exercise bike production cannibalised the production of normal bikes which remain in short supply. It will take time for furloughed and closed business to resume production – which will drive scarcity price hikes.
That scarcity affects everything from fridges to plane engines – which in turn will impact shipping. If the shippers aren’t getting paid for transporting fridges and toasters, they will seek ways to hike their prices for other goods, but shipping costs could normalise in the short-term because of shortages of goods in transit, rather than the global economy regaining equilibrium.
As inventories recover, we could see shipping prices stage a sharp rise again. A sudden spike in shipping, driven by recovery or through instability (like Taiwan) could well spook markets.
Iron and Steel
China has been in the grip of a strong recovery since last year– earlier this week, steel futures set new record highs. Iron ore prices are also at new tops. Prices for steel products in China (and therefore elsewhere) are set to rise – fuelled partly on the back of expectations prices are set to rise, but also on fears the Chinese government’s plan to reduce steel production to look climate compliant will create shortages. In short, it’s a hot market for steel in China.
Now the rest of the world is playing catch up. Steel prices have tripled from the pandemic lows as manufacturing, home building, large construction projects and infrastructure, new retail and commercial building, and even shipbuilding are all reopening and demanding metal! I was reading about Swiss Steel Group – a speciality steel firm that’s seen Q1 sales increase 12%.
However, a number of critical bottlenecks are emerging– including access to shipping, getting mines reopened and sourcing new supplies when companies find their pre-covid suppliers have gone bust. Iron ore shipping prices spiked this month by over 25%, driven by China demand. Prices are close to the last peak in 2019. Everyone wants Capesize dry-bulk freighters to bring Brazilian and Australian coal to China!
A further bottleneck could emerge from the uncertainty around Liberty Steel – the aerospace industry has already warned the UK government that Airbus and Rolls Royce are vulnerable if there is any shortage in high strength steels. Trying to find alternative supplies in a market that’s in “take-off” would be very difficult – and any slowdown at Rolls Royce would have a massive multiplier effect on its supply chain.
One little know effect on steel prices is a lack of scrap metal. Scrapping old ships is a major source of high-quality scrap for new steel. India is a major source, but is closed due to new Covid strain hammering health services. There is also a shortage of oxygen as Indian supplies are all earmarked for hospitals – and as the news programmes reveal, a burgeoning black market in the gas. Bangladesh and Pakistan seem unaffected and are getting a much higher slice of the scrap market.
These are just three areas of the real economy worth watching; home prices, supply chains and raw materials. Will they create boom or bust, inflation or opportunity? Who knows? Keep an eye on the space.
Palladium is a precious metal that is more valuable than gold, and its price has skyrocketed over the last couple of years. In 2018, it was worth nearly $1,000 an ounce. Now, a single ounce is worth nearly $3,000. But as its value has risen, devices that use palladium have become magnets for thieves.
The metal is primarily used inside of a catalytic converter, a device that converts harmful emissions such as carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide into less harmful ones before being released into the atmosphere. Since their adoption into the automobile industry in the 1970s, catalytic converters have led to a significant drop in carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide emissions. And the more palladium they use, the more efficient they are at combating these emissions — making them the perfect target for thieves.
Over the years, catalytic converter theft has drastically risen due to the increasing value of palladium. According to a study of reported thefts, on average, 108 catalytic converters were stolen per month in 2018. That number rose to 282 monthly thefts in 2019 and 1,203 thefts per month in 2020.
With more and more manufacturers trying to reduce their impact on the environment and as stricter emissions regulations come into effect in places like Europe and China, the demand for palladium will only continue to escalate.
Verge Science spoke with a chemical engineer and one of the leading recyclers of catalytic converters in the country to find out what makes palladium so valuable — and what it would take to find new alternatives for this precious resource. Watch our latest video to see what we discovered.
There was a time in this fair land when a federal budget was an economic document. These days, it is a social policy document aimed to buy votes. It’s actually quite sad.
David Rosenberg, Rosenberg Research
Welcome to the new Canada, where on Monday the Liberal government launched a grand experiment in retrograde economic policy. It deserves a name. When the Soviet Union began to collapse back in the 1980s under the weight of too much central planning, Mikhail Gorbachev brought in Perestroika, economic reforms aimed at reducing the role of central planners, bureaucrats and politicians by increasing economic reliance on markets. Canada is now moving in the other direction. Reverse Perestroika.
Terence Cochrane, Financial Post
Budget 2021 can be read as the opening salvo in a public relations war with the provinces. Freeland has set her government up as the saviour of working mothers and families with small children. She has used the pandemic as a policy window that increases government spending, not just as a response to the crisis but for the long-term.
Lydia Miljan, Fraser Institute
On Monday, Canada’s first female finance minister in her first budget, simply filled in the names of who will be getting the cheques, including everyone from women, to subsidized childcare providers, green energy aficionados (can’t forget them!), Indigenous Canadians, visible minority groups, the unemployed, seniors, students, young families and big and small business. Which would be great news if the government’s finances were in good shape, but they’re a train wreck.
Lorrie Goldstein, Toronto Sun
Yesterday’s Budget shows that marker of fiscal stability not being attained until 2055. In the meantime, the debt burden is depicted as ever so slightly and gradually declining from the current 50-percent mark. This signifies this government’s acceptance of a heavy debt burden and hence considerable risk for more than a generation.
Don Drummond, CD Howe Institute
Trudeau’s reckless budget burdens the kids he claims he’s helping. Eventually, someone has to pay for all of this spending.
Licia Corbella, Calgary Herald
It was inevitable that the budget would be more focused on redistribution than growth. This is a government that is far better at giving away money than generating it, collecting it or delivering services.
John Ivison, Vancouver Sun
War and Peace
As Tolstoy said of ‘War and Peace’, it’s “not a novel, even less is it a poem, and still less a historical chronicle.” I agree: it’s a schlep. It’s one of those epic novels that you look at and think – can I? And I must confess, with my eyesight, I can’t. Of course, that doesn’t mean one isn’t aware of what the book covers, the Napoleonic war between France and Russia, or its key question – is history driven by powerful underlying forces, or powerful leaders?
That question, Russia, and war and peace, are all going to be key today. Russian President Putin is due to speak to his Federal Assembly against the backdrop of the largest military mobilization since the Cold War, and perhaps in the region since World War Two. This has already seen the closure of the Kursk Strait, and it now includes shutting down the airspace around the region until April 24. Nobody knows what Putin will say, and it could all just be rhetoric, with the army in the background to warn the West not to try to expand NATO eastwards. Yet there are also suggestions Putin may announce the annexation of the Donbas region of Ukraine, within which 650,000 have claimed Russian passports in recent years.
The first question is what the Western response would be to a unilateral redrawing of national borders: and the answer is very little short of rhetoric and sanctions; and any real sanctions would hurt Western economies a lot – particularly on the cost-push inflation side. The second question is if we would see a (Western-backed?) Ukrainian military response – and then a Russian reprisal, and how far into Ukraine given the scale of forces amassed if so; or if Russian agent provocateurs will try to instigate to the same ends. Yet the limited room for a pain-free Western response remains the same. (For a more on this issue, please see here.)
Those who speak Russian know the Peace in Война и мир is a homonym that also means World, so the book’s title can be ‘War and the World’ if one wants it to be. Homonyms aren’t seen only in Russian – try peace and piece in English. Which, to paraphrase Mel Brooks, may have Putin proclaiming: “All I want is peace! Peace! A piece of Ukraine, and a piece of…..”. But how large a piece might mean no peace for the world?
Similarly, if less militarily, yesterday’s Boao speech from China’s Xi Jinping is today reported differently by different media:
- Xinhua notes: “Xi’s global governance remarks strike strong tone at Boao”;
- Newsweek went with “China’s Xi Jinping Warns U.S. of ‘Meddling in Others’ Internal Affairs’”;
- Reuters with “China’s Xi calls for fairer world order as rivalry with US deepens”; and
- Bloomberg with “Xi Challenges US Global Leadership, Warns Against Decoupling”.
Yes, no decoupling, please! Yet as Bloomberg also argues today, China’s digital CNY, while no threat to the USD as a reserve currency (as it’s an electronic version of a currency nobody wants), or a way to avoid sanctions –which remains to be seen– still “appears potentially more geopolitically significant as leverage over multinational companies and governments that want access to China’s 1.4 billion consumers. Since China has the ability to monitor transactions involving the digital currency, it may be easier to retaliate against anyone who rebuffs Beijing on sensitive issues like Taiwan, Xinjiang, and Hong Kong.” As former US Deputy National Security Advisor Mat Pottinger is quoted: “If you think that the US has a lot of power through our Treasury sanctions authorities, you ain’t seen nothing yet. That currency can be turned off like a light switch.”
So good luck to multinationals heartily agreeing that decoupling is unwanted, as they try to straddle the US, and its growing thicket of USD sanctions wrapped around a human rights foreign policy focus, and China, with its Panopticon e-CNY that can be turned off to ensure US sanctions and human rights foreign policy have no power over it. Somewhere in-between this Scylla and Charybdis sails the good ship Liberal World Order, the crew all merrily singing “I am the very model of a Build-Back-Better General.”
New Zealand already appears to have jumped the gun(ship) here, with its foreign minister partially walking away from the post-WW2 Five-Eyes western intelligence grouping if it involves doing anything about China.
Anyway, somewhere that powerful leaders are not being seen and powerful –dare I say revolutionary?– forces are sweeping in, is football. The European Super League, so derided in this Daily for the past two days, has crumbled. All six English clubs have pulled out, with one or two even apologizing to “legacy” fans, and the vice-chair of Manchester United resigning. Victory for the people’s game! Victory for localism over globalism! Well, yes,…except it’s far from certain the British government will now act as promised to deliver real power back into fans’ hands via partial ownership of the clubs they worship to stop this happening again. Moreover, the pre-existing football structure we revert to includes an expanded gilt-edged Champions League format, and a game that is still more about money than it is about anything else.
So does this portend the end of Build Back Better globalism? Or the end of neoliberal idiocy? Or the entrenchment of nasty neoliberalism as the savior from an even stupider version of neoliberalism? Well, in markets, every time our system fails we swear we are changing it in response – and then the same old faces do the same old things, but worse, under a new badge.
The primary way this now happens of course is that central banks pretend that not only do they not see the asset inflation they are deliberately stoking, they also don’t see the supply-side cost-push inflation. Instead, they talk about the wage inflation they can never stoke alone – and which even fiscal policy in tandem can’t either without people power ‘football’ policy. As we have just seen, this will also have to involve decoupling and (peaceful) redrawing of economic borders around a local, national, or limited international perimeter. On which note, the US push for a new liberal world fiscal order is reportedly already in trouble (no!) because Amazon doesn’t want to join the party: ‘Taxation Dies in Darkness’, it seems.
So to conclude my own epic here, which way are the powerful forces of history leading us? And what are powerful leaders going to do to either resist or accelerate this momentum? It seems odd for a global financial market with the attention span of a bowl of borscht to have to consider, but that kind of Tolstoyan question is still one for the ages. Today particularly so.