5 in 5 with ANZ
5 in 5 with ANZ
Wednesday: Firm US retail sales ease recession fear
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Wednesday: Firm US retail sales ease recession fear

US retail sales stronger than expected; Australian consumer confidence jumps; Fed looms over Bank Indonesia decision; Singapore chip exports fire up; ANZ's Cameron Mitchell on de-globalisation

Strong US retail sales ease recession fears, adding slightly to expectations of a 25 basis point cut by the Fed. Australia’s consumer confidence jumps. Singapore’s chip exports get a boost, and Bank Indonesia faces a tough rates decision today.

In our bonus deep dive interview, from the recent ANZ-sponsored AFR Asia summit, ANZ Head of Geopolitical Risk Cameron Mitchell explains why themes of de-globalisation and the de-coupling of the US and Chinese economies should be looked at through a different lens.

5 things to know:

  1. Fears of a US recession eased overnight as stronger-than-expected August retail sales numbers, along with solid industrial output and manufacturing data, pointed to solid activity, says ANZ Head of G3 Economics Brian Martin.

  2. Now all eyes are on the Federal Open Markets Committee’s rates announcement on Thursday morning Sydney/Melbourne time, and how much support it believes the US jobs market requires. Regardless of whether it is a 25 or 50 basis point cut, Brian says the crucial focus is how much rates look set to fall over the cycle.

  3. Singapore’s non-oil domestic export growth of 10.7% from a year ago was below expectations, but there were some welcome signs. ANZ Head of Asia Research Khoon Goh says electronics exports finally fired up, led by chips.

  4. ANZ-Roy Morgan Australian consumer confidence rose to its highest level since mid-July last week. ANZ Economist Maddy Dunk says the lift was broad based, although levels still haven’t hit the highs expected before the Stage 3 tax cuts kicked in mid-year.

  5. The People’s Bank of China decides on its one-year lending rate today. ANZ Research is expecting a 10 basis point reduction to 2.20%. Meanwhile, Bank Indonesia is reviewing its key policy rate. ANZ Economist Krystal Tan expects a hold at 6.25%.

Cheers

Bernard

PS: Catch you tomorrow with the US Federal Open Markets Committee’s rate decision.

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5 in 5 with ANZ
5 in 5 with ANZ
A daily podcast hosted by Bernard Hickey that gives you the five things you need to know about the global economy and markets in under five minutes. Plus a deep dive into emerging trends and issues featuring ANZ's global team of experts.