
China targets tax on offshore investments by their wealthy
10/15/24 • 4 min
Kia ora,
Welcome to Wednesday’s Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we lead with news China is dusting off some unused regulations to shore up its deteriorating financial situation.
But first, at the overnight dairy auction, prices were little-changed, down -0.2% in USD terms but up +2.8% in NZD terms. The dominant WMP price was essentially unchanged, but the foodservice commodities like SMP were down -1.8%, mozzarella down -8.2% and butter down -0.3%. Going the other way, cheddar cheese was up +4.2% and the only bright spot. No farm gate payout forecasts will be changed because of this event.
Last week's US retail impulse survey shows a strong rise of +5.6% from a year ago. And this is not only well ahead of inflation, it is built on a strong +4.6% gain in the same week a year ago.
Meanwhile, American consumer inflation expectations in September were little-changed at 3% for the year ahead. In fact consumer labour market and household finance expectations are largely stable too. Given it is an election period with its share of weirdness, perhaps this is not quite the result you might have expected.
But it is not all good. Business activity contracted modestly in New York State, according to firms responding to the October 2024 Empire State Manufacturing Survey. After climbing into positive territory last month, the headline general business conditions index retreated rather sharply. New order levels fell, and shipments edged lower.
Canada's CPI inflation rate fell to 1.6% in September, from 2.0% in August. It is now at its lowest level since February 2021. Lower fuel costs drove the retreat. It seems more likely now that Canada's central bank will cut its 4.25% policy rate when it next meets on Thursday, October 24 (NZT). Maybe outsized cuts are coming there.
Japan industrial production is becoming quite volatile with big jumps followed by bit dips. The August data revealed a big dip, year-on-year. It is hard to know what to make of this new volatility. But overall it represents a sag.
In a bit of a surprise, EU industrial production jumped in August and by enough to take the year-on-year level above August 2023, a rare event. It was the best month-on-month jump in more than a year. The European service sector is doing better and enabling local factories with more orders.
In China, Bloomberg is reporting that tax authorities there are cracking down on offshore income earned by their wealthy. It has begun enforcing a long-overlooked tax on overseas investment gains. Some wealthy individuals in major Chinese cities were told in recent months to conduct self-assessments or summoned by tax authorities for meetings to evaluate potential payments, including those in arrears from past years, they reported. The move underscores growing urgency in Beijing to expand its sources of revenue as land sales tumble and growth slows.
And we probably should note that those grain commodity price falls we noted yesterday have gathered steam today.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.04% and down -8 bps from yesterday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2661/oz and up +US$14 from this time yesterday.
Oil prices are down a sharpish -US$3.50 at just on US$70.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just under US$74.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 60.8 USc and down -10 bps from this time yesterday. Ag...
Kia ora,
Welcome to Wednesday’s Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we lead with news China is dusting off some unused regulations to shore up its deteriorating financial situation.
But first, at the overnight dairy auction, prices were little-changed, down -0.2% in USD terms but up +2.8% in NZD terms. The dominant WMP price was essentially unchanged, but the foodservice commodities like SMP were down -1.8%, mozzarella down -8.2% and butter down -0.3%. Going the other way, cheddar cheese was up +4.2% and the only bright spot. No farm gate payout forecasts will be changed because of this event.
Last week's US retail impulse survey shows a strong rise of +5.6% from a year ago. And this is not only well ahead of inflation, it is built on a strong +4.6% gain in the same week a year ago.
Meanwhile, American consumer inflation expectations in September were little-changed at 3% for the year ahead. In fact consumer labour market and household finance expectations are largely stable too. Given it is an election period with its share of weirdness, perhaps this is not quite the result you might have expected.
But it is not all good. Business activity contracted modestly in New York State, according to firms responding to the October 2024 Empire State Manufacturing Survey. After climbing into positive territory last month, the headline general business conditions index retreated rather sharply. New order levels fell, and shipments edged lower.
Canada's CPI inflation rate fell to 1.6% in September, from 2.0% in August. It is now at its lowest level since February 2021. Lower fuel costs drove the retreat. It seems more likely now that Canada's central bank will cut its 4.25% policy rate when it next meets on Thursday, October 24 (NZT). Maybe outsized cuts are coming there.
Japan industrial production is becoming quite volatile with big jumps followed by bit dips. The August data revealed a big dip, year-on-year. It is hard to know what to make of this new volatility. But overall it represents a sag.
In a bit of a surprise, EU industrial production jumped in August and by enough to take the year-on-year level above August 2023, a rare event. It was the best month-on-month jump in more than a year. The European service sector is doing better and enabling local factories with more orders.
In China, Bloomberg is reporting that tax authorities there are cracking down on offshore income earned by their wealthy. It has begun enforcing a long-overlooked tax on overseas investment gains. Some wealthy individuals in major Chinese cities were told in recent months to conduct self-assessments or summoned by tax authorities for meetings to evaluate potential payments, including those in arrears from past years, they reported. The move underscores growing urgency in Beijing to expand its sources of revenue as land sales tumble and growth slows.
And we probably should note that those grain commodity price falls we noted yesterday have gathered steam today.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.04% and down -8 bps from yesterday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2661/oz and up +US$14 from this time yesterday.
Oil prices are down a sharpish -US$3.50 at just on US$70.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now just under US$74.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 60.8 USc and down -10 bps from this time yesterday. Ag...
Previous Episode

No progress yet for China's reinvigoration
Kia ora,
Welcome to Tuesday’s Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we lead with news the world's second largest economy shows more signs of losing its expansion mojo
China's exports rose in September but at an unexpectedly slowish pace. They were expected to rise +6% from a year ago, but only rose +2.4%. This was the fifth consecutive month of export growth, though at the slowest pace since April. Cut price (dumped) steel exports were a factor, a trade that is worrying may countries. And as expected import growth was weak, barely more than a year ago and well less than the +0.6% rise expected.
China's new yuan loan growth also came in less than expected, rising almost +¥1.6 tln and much better than the 'modest' +¥1 tln in August. Banks are making more debt available. But it was a slower rise than the +¥1.9 tln expected. And in September 2023 they rose +¥2.3 tln, so well down on that basis too.
A lot now depends on issuing a lot more debt. Some this is an additional +¥9 tln is on the way, but to be fair much of that won't be direct commercial bank lending. But sovereign money-printing (bond issuance) may well flow though to this channel.
In a side note for China, we can report that their ETS carbon price rose to its highest-ever level yesterday, ¥103.5/tonne. The reason is that 'tougher' emissions standards are on the way there. But this ETS tax is low by New Zealand standards, equivalent to just NZ$24.40/tonne. Currently our ETS is pricing carbon at NZ$63/tonne. In the EU, that same price is €64.60/tonne (NZ$116). China's disincentive to pollute is cheap by comparison.
Singapore said it's economy grew +4.1% in Q3-2024 from a year earlier. That is its fastest pace in two years and accelerated from +2.9% growth in the Q2-2024 quarter.
Meanwhile in India, consumer inflation rose sharply in September to 5.5%, much higher than the August 3.7%. Driving this change were food prices, up at the rate of +9.2% in September and a far faster jump than the already-high +5.4% rise in August. This data may inhibit their central bank from starting an expected rate cut cycle. They have a mid-point inflation target of 4%.
In the US, recent days have brought sharpish falls in food commodity prices as it becomes clearer that US and international grain harvests will be very good this year. Wheat, soybean and corn prices are all falling on excess supply worries.
Overnight, the Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded. The prize was given to Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson for work that advanced the understanding of differences in prosperity between countries. Two are the authors of a book, 'Why Nations Fail'.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.12% and up +5 bps from yesterday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2647/oz and down -US$10 from this time yesterday.
Oil prices are down -US$1.50 at just on US$74/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is now at US$77.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 60.9 USc and down -20 bps from this time yesterday. Against the Aussie we are little-changed at 90.6 AUc. Against the euro we are also little-changed at 55.8 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today now just under 69.3, and marginally lower from yesterday at this time.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$65,786 and up +5.0% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been high at just on +/- 3.2%.
You c...
Next Episode

Current data lackluster, future view positive
Kia ora,
Welcome to Thursday’s Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect Aotearoa/New Zealand.
I'm David Chaston and this is the international edition from Interest.co.nz.
Today we lead with news economic data is light today and we await signals from the building Wall Street earnings season. Markets seem positive about what is ahead.
Meanwhile in the US, mortgage applications fell very sharply last week from the prior week, down -17% and the most in nine years (excluding the pandemic). And that was on top of the more than -5% drop last week. The reason is that benchmark mortgage interest rates have been rising for three weeks and are now at a 2 month high of 6.52% for the standard 30 year mortgage.
Canadian housing starts came in at a 224,000 annual rate in September, 18,806 for the month, less than expected but more than in August.
Japanese machinery orders, excluding those for ships and electric power companies, fell -3.4% in the year to August from the same period a year ago. This is a large miss because they were expected to rise +3.6% on that same basis. It was the fifth drop so far this year. Orders for those excluded items (ships and electric power companies) were quite good however, mitigating the fall.
The Bank of Thailand unexpectedly cut its key interest rate by -25 bps to 2.25% during its October meeting late yesterday, marking the first rate cut since early 2020. It was a move long advocated by the government but it was still not expected. They have a sluggish economy and inflation is now below the lower end of its target range of between 1% to 3%.
Indian exports remained quite lackluster in September at US$34.6 bln and virtually unchanged from a year ago. India is no export powerhouse yet. Imports were US$55.4 bln, so they ran yet another trade deficit and they have been doing that now since 1997 (with one exception in one month in the 2020 pandemic).
British CPI inflation fell to 1.7% in September, its lowest level since April 2021. It was down from 2.2% in August. But much of this sharply lower level came from sharply lower airline ticket prices, something that may be a bit of a one-off.
In Australia, they reported an unusually low birth rate yesterday, with a record low fertility rate. (But it is similar to New Zealand's.) High housing costs are getting the blame.
The UST 10yr yield is now at just on 4.01% and down -3 bps from yesterday.
The price of gold will start today at US$2670/oz and up +US$p from this time yesterday - and a new all-time high.
Oil prices are holding lower at just on US$70.50/bbl in the US while the international Brent price is still just under US$74.50/bbl.
The Kiwi dollar starts today at 60.6 USc and down -25 bps from this time yesterday. Against the Aussie we are up +20 bps at 90.9 AUc. Against the euro we have dipped -10 bps to 55.7 euro cents. That all means our TWI-5 starts today now just under 69.2, and marginally lower that at yesterday at this time.
The bitcoin price starts today at US$67,639 and up another +0.9% from this time yesterday. Volatility over the past 24 hours has been modeST at under +/- 1.7%.
You can find links to the articles mentioned today in our show notes.
You can get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.
Kia ora. I'm David Chaston. And we will do this again tomorrow.
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