Corporate Earnings and U.S GDP Numbers Keep the USD in Focus

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

The economic calendar was on the busier side through the Asian session this morning.

Key stats included March trade figures out of New Zealand, April inflation, retail sales and industrial production figures out of Japan. For the Aussie Dollar, wholesale inflation numbers were released.

For the Kiwi Dollar,

According to NZStats, the annual trade deficit narrowed from NZ$6,620m to NZ$5,620m in March. Rising exports and a fall in imports led to better than forecasted trade figures.

  • Exports hit a record high in March, rising by NZ$899m (19%) to NZ5.7bn. Higher exports of dairy, meat and forestry products, from China, in particular, drove exports.

  • In contrast, the total value of imports fell by NZ$174m (-3.5%) to NZ$4.8bn.

  • The monthly trade surplus widened from NZ$12m to NZ$922m in March, the highest since April 2011.

  • While the monthly trade surplus hit an 8-year high, the annual trade deficit of NZ$5,620m remains at high levels.

The Kiwi Dollar moved from $0.66327 to $0.66340 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, Kiwi Dollar was up 0.23% to $0.6641 for the session.

For the Japanese Yen,

Tokyo core consumer prices rose by 1.3% in April, which was better than a forecasted and March 1.1% increase.

According to figures released by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication,

  • Rising prices for fuel, light and water charges (+6.4%), furniture and household utensils (+3.2%) and culture and recreation (+2.6%) contributed to the pickup in inflationary pressure.

  • A 0.5% fall in prices for transportation and communication was the only negative number in April.

  • Also dragging on inflation was a 0.5% rise in prices for housing, a 0.7% rise in prices for education and a 0.8% rise in prices medical care.

Retail sales rose by 1%, coming in ahead of a forecasted 0.8% increase. In February, retail sales rose by 0.6%. The figures were released by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

Industrial production fell by 0.9% in March, according to prelim figures released by Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry,

  • Industries that mainly contributed to the decrease were: Motor vehicles; production machinery; and fabricated metals.

  • Industries that mainly contributed to an increase were: Electronic parts and devices; general-purpose and business-oriented machinery; and inorganic and organic metals.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥111.555 to ¥111.510 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Japanese Yen was flat at ¥111.63 against the U.S Dollar

For the Aussie Dollar,

Wholesale prices rose by 0.4% in the 1st quarter from the 4th quarter. While in line with forecasts, inflation softened from 0.5% in the 4th quarter. The annual rate of wholesale inflation stood at 1.9%, reflecting a softening in factory gate prices from the 4th quarter of 2018. Forecasts were for wholesale inflation to hold steady at 2%.