In This Article:
Earlier in the Day:
After a choppy start to the year, it’s a big week ahead, with focus being on the resumption of trade talks between the U.S and China this morning, Brexit, the government shutdown, central bank policy and a number of key stats that will provide further direction on where the global economy is heading going into the New Year.
Economic data scheduled for release this morning is on the lighter side, with stats limited to November AIG Manufacturing Index numbers out of Australia.
For the Aussie Dollar, the AIG Manufacturing Index fell from 51.3 to 49.5 in December to signal a contraction at the end of the 4th quarter, the first in 26 months. The December number came in at its lowest level since Aug-2016.
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6 out of 7 activity indexes fell in December, indicating generally weaker conditions.
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Food & beverage manufacturers and businesses in smaller manufacturing sectors reported higher production in the run up to Christmas.
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Large metals, machinery & equipment and chemicals sectors reported a gradual slowing down of demand, continuing a downward trend through the 2nd half of 2018.
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Across the manufacturing sectors, 5 of the 7 sectors expanded, 2 were stable with the large metals sector in contraction.
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3 of the 7 activity indexes contracted in December, 3 were stable, with finished stocks the only activity index in expansion.
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Input prices rose to a 3-month high, with the average wage index also on the rise, reflecting a continued upward trend in wages.
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In contrast, factory gate prices fell, weighing on margins at the end of the year.
Looking at the numbers:
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The employment index fell by 1.5 points to 47.9.
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New orders rose by 0.3 points to 49.0, well below a 12-month average 57.7.
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The production sub-index fell by 2.4 points to 49.4, also well below a 12-month average 57.7.
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The input price sub-index rose by 1.3 points to 76.3, holding above a 12-month average 71.5, while the selling price sub-index fell by 6.3 points to 44.1.
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Average wages rose by 5.4 points to 64.2.
The Aussie Dollar stood at $0.7124 at the time of writing, a up 0.15 for the morning, supported by the risk on sentiment and FED Chair Powell’s more dovish stance on Friday.
Elsewhere, the Japanese Yen was flat at ¥108.51, with the Kiwi Dollar up just 0.09% to $0.6738, some caution lingering in the FX word at the start of the week, with focus being on the U.S – China trade talks.
The Day Ahead:
For the EUR, economic data scheduled for release through the day ahead includes November factory order and retail sales figures out of Germany, along with retail sales numbers out of the Eurozone, with German factory orders likely to have the greatest impact on the EUR from a data front, forecasts being EUR negative.