AUSTRALIA DATA: Discounting Boosts November Sales, Spending Data On Friday

Jan-09 00:52

November retail sales rose 0.8% m/m boosted by Black Friday sales, the eighth straight monthly increase. The annual rate eased to 3.0% y/y from 3.5% y/y but continues to signal a pickup in spending in H2 2024. Three-month momentum is at its highest in two years as disposable income growth improves with wage increases, lower inflation and tax cuts. 

  • Around mid-2025 retail sales will be replaced by household spending, a more comprehensive measure including services, which is released January 10 for November.
  • Discounts have spread to the whole of November from just Cyber week, according to the ABS.
  • The ABS noted that Black Friday discounting boosted all retail sectors but clothing & footwear and department stores saw the largest increases at +1.6% m/m and 1.8% m/m respectively. Price reductions included food and restaurant/café sales rose strongly up 1.5% m/m and food retailing +0.5%.
  • Sales in all sectors excluding department stores are higher compared to a year ago.

Australia retail sales $mn

Source: MNI - Market News/ABS

Historical bullets

RBA: Forecasters Divided Between Q1 & Q2 2025 Start To Easing Cycle

Dec-09 23:47

In the November Bloomberg survey, the median response expected the first 25bp rate cut in Q1 2025. February 18 is the only meeting in Q1. Another 25bp is forecast in Q2 and by the end of the year. The market has almost fully priced in the April 1 meeting. Some analysts have pushed out their expectations from February to May since the November minutes said that more than one good quarterly inflation read would be needed to be “confident” that lower headline is having a “more pervasive effect”. The RBA is widely forecast to leave rates unchanged today and we expect its guidance to be little changed (see MNI RBA Preview). The next Bloomberg survey is released on December 18.

Australia rate expectations bp

Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg

JGB TECHS: (Z4) Recovers Off New Lows

Dec-09 23:45
  • RES 3: 149.55 - High Mar 22 (cont)
  • RES 2: 147.74 - High Jan 15 and bull trigger (cont)  
  • RES 1: 146.53 - High Aug 6 
  • PRICE: 143.10 @ 16:09 GMT Dec 09
  • SUP 1: 142.51 - Low Nov 22
  • SUP 2: 142.23 - Low Jul 02
  • SUP 3: 140.21 - 1.236 proj of Mar 22 - Nov 1 ‘23 - Jan 15 price swing    

Prices fell again late last week, extending the recent pullback. Recent weakness has culminated in a break of 143.57, marking both the Jul 17 high on the continuation contract as well as the Oct 22 low. For now, the 50-dma tops out at 144.19, and marks first resistance. Any recovery would open 146.53, the Aug 6 high (cont) and a bull trigger. 

JGBS: Futures Cheaper Overnight With US Tsys, 5Y Supply Due

Dec-09 23:42

In post-Tokyo trade, JGB futures are weaker, -16 compared to settlement levels, after US tsys finished Monday’s session with yields 2-5bps higher and the curve steeper. However, trading was very quiet to start the week, with a risk-off tone prevailing. Wall Street closed with small losses after profit-taking ahead of Wednesday's CPI report. PPI inflation data is on Thursday.

  • Upcoming supply, including $119bn in Treasury auctions this week and a rash of corporate issuance, weighed.
  • Geopolitics, along with various supply and demand considerations helped boost oil and gold, even as the dollar rose.
  • The Bank of Japan is taking an unusual step that signals its efforts to improve communications, in a move that may increase market expectations for a rate hike next month. (per BBG)
  • The central bank’s Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino will be giving a speech to local business leaders in Yokohama followed by a press conference on Jan. 14, the BOJ said Monday. The move is unusual, as board members haven’t held this kind of event before the first policy meeting of the year at least since former Governor Haruhiko Kuroda began his term in 2013.
  • Today, the local calendar will see M2 & M3 Money Stock and Machine Tool Orders data alongside 5-year supply.