Tuesday, December 5, 2023 10:00 PM EST
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Clue to the weakness came in trade data
One clue that today's 3Q23 GDP growth figure was not going to match the optimistic 0.5% consensus expectation was from the contributions to GDP from net exports data released yesterday. That showed a 0.6pp drag on growth, more than the 0.2pp drag expected, and removing most of the 0.8pp boost from the previous quarter. Inventories also dragged down the GDP growth rate.
Household consumption has slowed again and made no change over the previous quarter. Household consumption has been slowing continuously since 2Q22, and shows the impact of the RBA's rate increases so far. Encouragingly for them, it appears to be working.
But non-dwelling construction spending rebounded strongly following the weak 2Q23 figure (-1.8%) and grew by 3.3% QoQ. Dwelling construction grew only 0.2% QoQ, with most of that coming from alterations, while new construction slowed by 0.3%.
Government spending was also strong. General government consumption rose 1.1%, with a strong gain in defence spending (4.7%) helping to push up the total.
Markets shrug off numbers
Despite the weakness of the GDP release, markets largely shrugged off the news. AUDUSD, which weakened yesterday in sympathy with the EUR, actually picked up slightly following the figures.
2Y government bond yields, which opened lower after declines in US Treasuries and Eurozone bond yields overnight, also showed little inclination to respond to this data, and neither did longer maturity bond yields.
Yesterday, the RBA left the language of its statement largely unchanged from the previous meeting as it left the cash rate unchanged at 4.35%, offering no fresh clues as to whether their rate hiking cycle has ended or not. Today's data don't close the book on further rate hikes, but they do make it harder for the RBA to justify further hikes without some stronger accompanying evidence that the inflation battle is stalling.
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Disclaimer: This publication has been prepared by the Economic and Financial Analysis Division of ING Bank N.V. (“ING”) solely for information purposes without regard to any ...
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