Singapore retail sales climb 4.5% year on year in March, driven by food and alcohol sales
Singapore's retail sales in March were 4.5% higher than a year ago, coming in at $4.1 billion the whole month. This was lower than the 11.6% increase seen in February.
Excluding motor vehicles, retail sales were up 4.1% year on year, at $3.5 billion.
The country's department of statistics said most industries in Singapore recorded year-on-year increases in March sales.
This was led by the food and alcohol industry, which recorded 55.1% year-on-year growth, due mainly to higher demand for alcoholic products.
— Lim Hui Jie
Reserve Bank of Australia indicates mean peak rate already reached: CBA
The Reserve Bank of Australia's latest monetary policy statement indicates the central bank has already reached its peak cash rate of 3.85%, Commonwealth Bank of Australia said in a Friday note.
"Our take on this important forward guidance is that the Board is willing to raise the cash rate again in this cycle. But another rate increase would require the economic data, particularly around inflation, GDP, the unemployment rate and wages, to come in stronger than their updated forecasts," CBA economists wrote.
"Put another way, we do not think the RBA will lift the cash rate again if the economic data print in line or weaker than their forecasts," they wrote.
— Jihye Lee
China's services readings suggests 'modestly slower' recovery, Goldman Sachs says
China's Caixin services purchasing managers index as well as the release from the National Bureau of Statistics point to a "modestly slower" recovery, Goldman Sachs economists said in a Friday note.
"It suggests recovery in the services sector continued but at a modestly slower pace in April," they wrote.
The economists noted inflation related to services maintained elevated levels for the month, especially for input prices.
— Jihye Lee
HSBC shareholders to vote on whether to spin off Asia business
HSBC shareholders are set to vote on proposals at the bank's annual meeting Friday, including on whether to spin off its Asia business.
Resolution 17 and 18 on the agenda, tabled by a group of investors led by Ken Lui, call for a "strategic review" of the company, including the spinoff proposal and fixed dividends.
These have received support from HSBC's top shareholder Ping An Insurance, but HSBC advised investors to reject the two resolutions, a stance that was supported by investor advisory firms ISS and Glass Lewis.
As these are deemed "special resolutions," Lui's motions will need 75% of votes cast in favor to pass.
Read the full story here.
— Lim Hui Jie
Philippines inflation eases for third straight month to 6.6% in April
Headline inflation in the Philippines have eased for the third straight month to 6.6% year on year, down from 7.6% in March.
This was also lower than economists expectations of a 7% rise.
In a release, the country's statistics authority said the downtrend was mainly brought about by a lower inflation rate for food and non-alcoholic beverages, which recorded 7.9% compared to 9.3% in March.
Transport was the second-top contributor to the downtrend, with an inflation rate of 2.6% in April compared to 5.3% in March.
Inflation in the Philippines hit a 15-year high in January at 8.7%, its highest level since October 2008.
— Lim Hui Jie
Australia still sees 'further tightening' of monetary policy even after surprise rate hike
Australia's central bank still sees that "some further tightening of monetary policy" may be required to rein in inflation, the Reserve Bank of Australia said in its May Statement on Monetary Policy.
The central bank noted that this "will depend upon how the economy and inflation evolve."
This comes as the Reserve Bank of Australia surprised markets by raising rates by 25 basis points to 3.85% on Tuesday.
In its statement, the RBA lowered its near-term inflation and GDP forecasts, while saying that inflation is still not expected to return to upper end of 2-3% target range until the middle of 2025.
The central bank also foresees goods inflation to moderating further, while energy and services inflation is seen to remain elevated, with the services sector set to see growth in labor costs and rents.
— Lim Hui Jie
Apple's Asia suppliers mixed after earnings beat estimates
— Jihye Lee
Indonesia's economy expanded year-on-year in the first quarter of 2023
Indonesia's gross domestic product expanded 5.03% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2023.
The robust economic growth beat expectations of 4.95% predicted in a Reuters poll and higher than growth of 5.01% recorded in the first quarter of last year.
Quarter-on-quarter basis, Indonesia's economy contracted 0.92%, less than forecasts for a 1% decline. The economy grew by 0.36% in the final quarter of last year.
Based on production, the transportation and storage sector saw the most growth at 15.93%, the country's statistics department said. Based on expenditure, the export of goods and services recorded the highest growth of 11.68%.
— Lim Hui Jie
China's Caixin services purchasing managers index slips
China's Caixin/S&P Global services purchasing managers' index fell to 56.4 in April from 57.8 in the previous month.
The reading marked the second-highest figure recorded since November 2020 and the fourth consecutive months above the 50-mark that separates growth and contraction.
The survey showed expansion in services activity despite disappointing factory activity in Mainland China earlier this week.
The reading suggests that services activity is still "undergoing a fast recovery," according to Wang Zhe, Senior Economist at Caixin Insight Group.
— Jihye Lee
Hong Kong's IPO market bets on a rebound, but the biggest listing so far flopped
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange in Hong Kong, China, on Wednesday, July 13, 2022.
Paul Yeung | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Hong Kong's biggest listing so far in 2023 flopped last week, suggesting that the market still needs time to rebound, despite hopes of recovery.
Shares of Chinese spirit maker ZJLD Group tumbled almost 18% on their first day of trading on April 27.
"The sentiment in the IPO markets has not built up yet. A lot of industries are still suffering," said Ringo Choi, Asia-Pacific IPO leader at EY.
"The underlying economy is not doing well," said Irene Chu, partner at KPMG China. "The concern is still about the high interest rate environment and a lot of the attention in the Greater China region is about the recovery of the economy," said Chu.
The share price of ZJLD Group has been relatively flat from last week.
Read the full story here.
— Sheila Chiang
Week ahead: China trade and inflation, South Korea's unemployment, India's industrial output
A number of economic data releases are expected next week for Asia-Pacific markets, including China's inflation data, India's industrial production and the Philippines' trade balance.
On Monday, Taiwan reports its trade data. Economists at Citi expect that in April, Taiwan's exports declined 21.4% year on year and imports fell 22.6% year on year.
"Non-tech exports to China are yet to recover (as indicated by trade data from China) and lower commodity prices will reduce the value of exports," Citi economists wrote in a Thursday note.
China's April trade data will also be released Tuesday along with Malaysia's gross domestic product.
South Korea's current account balance for March and unemployment rate for April are expected on Wednesday.
China's producer price index and consumer price index are slated to be published on Thursday. For March, China's CPI reading rose marginally by 0.7% year-on-year while the PPI marked a 2.5% year-on-year decline. The Philippines reports its gross domestic product for the first quarter on this day as well.
India's industrial output for March will be published on Friday after marking year-on-year growth of 5.6% in February. Citi economists expect headline inflation to fall toward 4.8% year on year, marking the first print below 5% since November 2021.
— Jihye Lee
CNBC Pro: Goldman Sachs names a slew of energy companies to buy right now as attitudes shift
Goldman Sachs has identified a number of energy stocks to own ahead of an expected turn in the market's sentiment toward the oil and gas sector.
The Wall Street bank said it had observed greater ownership of the energy sector due to a change in the way ESG investors — or those who take environmental, social and governance factors into account — approach investing. Instead of divesting from fossil fuels altogether, they're focusing more on engaging with these companies for better environmental outcomes, according to the bank.
ESG funds raised their exposure to the energy sector by 8 percentage points in the first three months of this year, Goldman added.
CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.
— Ganesh Rao
CNBC Pro: Intel vs. AMD? Analysts prefer one stock for its long-term push in A.I.
Goldman Sachs advises investors to be overweight in non-U.S. markets
In the case that markets avoid a recession, Goldman Sachs says interests rates will likely then rise, putting downward pressure on valuations. In this case, the bank tells investors to position themselves to position themselves in markets outside of the U.S.
"We continue to recommend an overweight in non-US markets which are cheap with a similar growth profile. Returns for dollar-based investors should also get a boost from a gradually lower dollar," several analysts wrote in a Thursday note.
The company added that it favors quality growth and stable margin businesses "together with some deep value – Energy, Natural Resources and European Banks." Our strategists in the US and Asia have a preference for quality and defensive equities as well.
— Hakyung Kim
Every stock in closely followed regional banking index trades down
The KRE
— Alex Harring
Western Alliance shares lose more than half their value, trading halted for volatility
Trading for Western Alliance Bancorp shares was paused multiple times on Thursday, as the stock plunged 58.2%. The move comes as regional banking peer PacWest Bancorp saw its stock lose 59% on news of exploring a sale. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF lost more than 9% Thursday amid the uncertainty.
Western Alliance Bancorp shares
— Hakyung Kim
Claims, productivity, labor costs and trade data miss estimates
A round of economic data points Thursday morning mostly came in worse than Wall Street expectations.
Jobless claims totaled 242,000 for the week ended April 29, higher than the 236,000 estimate from Dow Jones. Worker productivity in the first quarter declined 2.7% against the estimate for a 1.9% drop, while unit labor costs, an inflation gauge, accelerated 6.3% in Q1, higher than the 5.5% expectation.
Finally, the trade deficit declined to $64.2 billion, but that was higher than the $63.1 billion estimate.
—Jeff Cox
ECB hikes rates a quarter point as expected
The European Central Bank on Thursday raised interest rates by a quarter percentage point, in line with market expectations, noting that inflation is still too high and underlying pressures persist.
A day after the U.S. Federal Reserve announced a similar hike, the ECB took its key borrowing rates up to a respective 3.75%, 4% and 3.25%, near a 15-year high. The Fed's move brought its fund rate to a target range of 5%-5.25%.
Headline inflation is running around 7% in the euro zone, well above the ECB's 2% target.
—Jeff Cox
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Asia markets mixed as Wall Street marks four-day losing streak on banking woes - CNBC
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