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The global share market started the month with steady gains but pulled back on the

news of a new Covid-19 variant, closing lower for the month of November.


Investors began the month watching the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP 26),

where country leaders met in Glasgow to discuss ongoing climate commitments.

While the commitments from countries were mixed, the conference set new rules

for the international carbon market, which will be supervised by the United Nations.


In the U.S., President Biden’s reappointment of Jerome Powell as Federal

Reserve chair provided investors with confidence in stable monetary policy.

However, this was not enough to alleviate inflation fears, as CPI data continued to

exceed expectations.


Positive market sentiment on economic reopening began to wane with news of reimposed Covid-19 restrictions in Austria and the Netherlands in response to a fifth wave of Covid-19 in Europe. New restrictions were increasingly met with public dissatisfaction and protests broke out across Europe against lockdown measures and vaccine mandates.


Public frustrations also arose in Turkey, as President Erdogan continued with his

controversial policy of interest rate cuts. The Turkish Lira has lost 40% of its value

against the USD over this year, and inflation has shot above 20% in the country.


In contrast to other developed countries New Zealand continued to raise rates, with

the Reserve Bank of New Zealand hiking the Official Cash Rate by another 25 basis

points to 0.75%. The rate hike was in line with investors’ expectations but was

overshadowed by the first detection of the Covid-19 Omicron variant in South Africa.


Global share markets and bond yields plummeted as concerns around further

mutations, vaccine efficacy and reimplementation of restrictions sparked

investors’ fears of a delayed recovery. The price of oil dropped by 13% on a single day, exacerbated by the United States’ plan to release 50 million barrels of oil from the strategic reserves to moderate high prices.



Looking back


While global shares and property lost ground over the month, the one year return remains good relative to history. The New Zealand market underperformed its global peers, resulting in a negative return over the last year. Although the Reserve Bank raised the OCR during the month, both global and New Zealand bond yields decreased as investors reacted to the Omicron variant. This produced positive returns for fixed income for the month, but over one year both New Zealand and global fixed income returns are negative.



During the month the selloff in global markets extended to the New Zealand and

Australian dollar, as investors flocked to safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese yen

and U.S. dollar. Over the last year, however, the returns on the New Zealand dollar have

been more mixed, with the New Zealand dollar increasing against some currencies and

decreasing against others.


Lower than expected half-year earnings for Ryman Healthcare (RYM) saw the stock

plummet mid-month. Combined with the heightened uncertainty surrounding Covid-19,

the stock remained at low levels for the remainder of November. During the month,

Ryman’s board announced the appointment of Greg Campbell as Dr David Kerr’s successor

as Chair.

A2 Milk (ATM) sold off sharply late November as Omicron fears reached the New Zealand

market. News of a second class-action lawsuit alleging insider trading against the company

also put downward pressure on the stock.

In contrast to the wider market, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare (FPH) rallied at month end,

closing with a positive return for November. The gains came on the back of strong halfyear

earnings, further magnified by the potential growth opportunity the Omicron variant

may present to the business.


Over the last few years, we've all become more aware of the damaging impacts of climate change and the small part we can all play in creating a healthier environment for future generations.


Whether it's taking a reusable coffee cup to your local cafe, considering water and energy ratings when shopping for appliances, or separating your rubbish from your recycling; our consciousness of sustainability is shaping decisions we all make and, for investment companies, this is no different.


In our latest investment discussion, Trilogy is proud to present Aaron Klee, Head of Investment Management at AMP New Zealand, to discuss the importance of considering environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) factors when investing, and the global shift in favour of sustainable decision-making. Aaron has over 25 years of industry experience, having worked at AMP alone for over a decade.


In this discussion, Trilogy's Investment Specialist Chiti discusses with Aaron, what sustainable investing means, how this affects investors now and into the future, and how AMP Investments partnering with investment management company, Blackrock, will benefit their investors going forward.




Disclaimer

This video is for information purposes only and should not be treated as financial advice. To the extent permitted by law, AMP Wealth Management New Zealand Limited, and Trilogy Financial Solutions NZ Limited, do not accept any responsibility or liability arising from your use of this information.


People with deposits in the bank are getting half the return they were two years ago, but there could be good news on the horizon.

While plummeting interest rates eased the burden on borrowers, Covid has been hard on savers, and people with money in the bank have faced negligible returns, data from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand Te Pūtea Matua​ shows.

The central bank lifted the official cash rate (OCR) by 25 basis points on Wednesday, which prompted ASB and ANZ to increase some of its savings account and home loan rates by a similar margin.


Freelance economist Tony Alexander​ says since the Covid pandemic struck, the gap between term deposit rates and home loan rates has widened, and that was capitalism at work.

“Banks are not short of money to lend out, so they don’t need to compete aggressively,” Alexander says. “They are awash with funding.”


But economist Brad Olsen from Infometrics says local deposits will become more important for banks when they face higher capital requirements next year.

In October 2019​, the average one-year standard home loan cost 4.35 per cent​, compared to the average six-month term deposit of 2.73​ per cent, a difference of 1.62​ percentage points.

But after aggressive cuts in the OCR by the Reserve Bank, the gap between the six-month term deposit rate, and the one-year standard home loan rate had widened to 2.5​ percentage points by October this year.


Improvements in the margins between the cost of bank funding, and the rates at which banks could lend money, was cited by Westpac and ANZ when they announced strong profits several weeks ago, delivering after-tax profits of $1.01 billion​ and $1.91b​ respectively.

It wasn’t only the Reserve Bank that had helped flood banks with cheap funding, Alexander​ says.

Nervous households and businesses boosted their savings in banks as insurance against hard times.


“People like the flexibility of money in the bank,” Alexander​ says.

The difference between the lending and deposit rates is just capitalism at work, he says.

That data showed a depositor with an average six-month in October was getting just over 48 per cent​ of the return they were getting two years earlier, despite inflation having spiked sharply, pushing the real return deep into negative territory.

Economist Brad Olsen​ from Infometrics​ has been tracking the depositor-borrower gap, using a slightly different measure.


“I’ve looked at one-year fixed [home loan] rates and one-year term deposit rates,” he says.

The home loan rates were “special” rates for people with more than 20​ per cent equity in their homes.

“What they show is that savings rates have fallen further than borrowing rates through the Covid period, as other funding sources made banks less reliant on deposit funds,” Olsen says.


Mind the Gap

Economist Brad Olsen charted the gap between one-year 'special' home loan rates, and one-tear term deposit rates. The gap has widened significantly during the Covid pandemic.


But depositors may soon become more important to banks, and that could lead to a better deal compared to borrowers.

“With deposits going to become more important for banks heading forward, we expect there to be upwards pressure on term deposit rates and similar. But, given where inflation sits, term deposits will still be providing a loss in real purchasing power terms,” Olsen says.


The margins between six-month deposit rates, and the interest banks charge on credit card and overdraft debt had also widened between October 2019 and October 2021.

Borrowers using the average two-year fixed rate standard home loan from banks were paying an average of 4.41 ​per cent in October compared to 4.22​ per cent in October this year.

The effective average interest paid by borrowers with interest-bearing debt on their cards rose from 17.8​ per cent to 18.1​ per cent, over the same time period.

The average SME overdraft rate dropped from 9​ per cent to 8.35​ per cent.


Article source: https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/127069126/why-are-deposit-rates-so-low-when-home-loan-rates-are-rising-so-fast

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