GOLD: Prices Stable as Gold’s Rally Fades.

Mar-05 22:21

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* With tariffs now announced, the 'safe haven' bid that gold enjoys was less evident today. * Open...

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OIL: Crude Lower As Tariffs Delayed & Global Growth Concerns Rise

Feb-03 22:14

Oil prices gave up most of their earlier gains to finish Monday slightly lower. They rose on the prospect of US tariffs but eased when Mexico’s were delayed a month boosting hopes that a trade war will be avoided. They have also been postponed 30 days for Canada. While tariffs are inflationary and the prospect boosted oil prices, the market is also concerned about their impact on demand. The USD index rose 0.1%. 

  • WTI fell 0.3% to $72.33/bbl, taking another leg down following news of the delay in implementing US tariffs on Canada. It fell to a low of $72.05 following the news on Mexico, below support at $72.26, 50-day EMA, which suggests scope for a deeper retracement. The next support level is $68.05.
  • Brent is 0.4% lower at $75.40/bbl following a low of $75.04, below support at $75.47, 50-day EMA, and $75.36 opening up $71.25, December 20 low. The correction has allowed an overbought position to unwind. The bull trigger is at $81.20.
  • OPEC+ left its output targets unchanged at its review on Monday, despite US President Trump urging it to increase production and thus reduce prices.
  • 10% tariffs on Canadian oil imports are estimated to add 8% to heating expenses in the Northeast US (National Energy Assistance Directors Association) and 15c/gallon to fuel prices (Lipow Oil Associates) but it will vary by region. The West Coast could see gasoline prices rise 20c/gallon and if Canada exports to other countries then they could rise over 30c/gallon. Flows to the US have soared to beat the tariff deadline.
  • Some Canadian refineries have already begun to increase prices. March US gasoline futures rose 1.9% on Monday but spiked 6.2% on the open.

BONDS: NZGBS: Cheaper With US Tsys After US Tariff Pauses

Feb-03 22:05

In local morning trade, NZGBs are 1-2bps cheaper after US tsys bear-flattened, with US yields finishing flat to 5bps higher. 

  • Markets reacted positively midmorning to headlines that Pres Trump agreed to delay a 25% tariff on Mexico, with equities paring losses.
  • FX markets were extremely volatile Monday, with the initial likely implementation of tariffs prompting a broad strengthening of the greenback, and particular pressure on the Mexican peso and the Canadian dollar.
  • After the US market close, Canadian PM Trudeau wrote on X.co that US tariffs on Canada due to be imposed overnight will be "paused for at least 30 days" pending further discussions.
  • Building Permits fell 5.6% m/m in December versus a revised +4.9% in November.
  • Auckland's Average House Price fell 11% in January (+2.8% y/y).
  • Swap rates are 1-3bps higher, with the 2s10s curve steeper.
  • RBNZ dated OIS pricing is little changed. 49bps of easing is priced for February, with a cumulative 127bps by November 2025.
  • Tomorrow, the local calendar will see the Q4 Employment Report.
  • On Thursday, the NZ Treasury plans to sell NZ$225mn of the 4.50% Apr-27 bond, NZ$225mn of the 2.00% May-32 bond and NZ$50mn of the 2.75% May-51 bond.

NZD: NZD/USD Briefly Makes New Yearly Lows, Recovers To Closed Little Changed

Feb-03 21:55
  • The NZD/USD saw a v shaped recovering on Monday, after initially making new yearly lows of 0.5516 a huge 2.20% fall, before recovering a large portion of the losses, as positive headlines comes out of Canada/US this morning the NZD is rallying last trading at 0.5625 to now trade little changed from Friday's close
  • Trump has been on the phone to leaders of each country over the past 24 hours, he has now said the tariffs on Mexico wont go into effect after they agreed to send 10,000 troops to the boarder, and has said a call with Canada went "very well". Trudeau has since announced tariffs will be delayed for 30 days.
  • The kiwi made new yearly lows of 0.5515 on Monday, before a sharp recovery, a break back below this level would open a move to 0.5500 (2022 lows). Technical indicators remain bearish with the MACD printing red bars, while the RSI indicator is now at 41. Resistance is 0.5710 (50-day EMA)
  • Auckland’s housing market saw mixed trends in January. The average price fell 11% m/m to NZ$1.05m but remained up 2.8% y/y, while the median price dropped 5% m/m and 1.7% y/y. Sales declined to 700 from 833 in December, though they were up 39% y/y. New listings surged to 1,361 (vs. 780 in December), and total stock rose to 5,383, the highest January level since 2021. Managing Director Peter Thompson called the 700 sales a “solid start” despite the holiday period. New Zealand’s number of new dwellings consented in December fell to 2,702 units from 2,862 in November.
  • No large nearby strikes Tuesday, upcoming notable strikes: 0.5525 (NZD680m Feb. 6), 0.5395 (NZD471.2m Feb. 6), 0.5700 (NZD379.1m Feb. 5)
  • Calendar is empty for the remainder of the session, focus turning toemployment data tomorrow