Overview – Our working assumption is that the 90-day pause on the Trump administration’s reciprocal tariffs will be made permanent, with tariffs remaining at 10% for most countries apart from China. Providing Congress soon recycles the tariff revenue into …
16th April 2025
Bank holds but further cuts likely amid dovish communications The Bank of Canada’s decision to keep interest rates unchanged at 2.75% today was not a huge surprise given recent above-target gains in core prices, concerns about future price increases and …
The extremely high US import tariffs imposed on China will likely strengthen the forces that have driven multinational corporates to shift production for the US market away from China and towards other EMs in recent years. Those EMs with spare capacity in …
Tariff hit yet to come The fall in industrial production in March was not as bad as it looks given that it was driven solely by a large weather-related drop in utilities output. Manufacturing enjoyed a strong first quarter with output rising by 5.1% …
Consumption growth rebounds following weather-related weakness A presumably temporary pre-tariff surge in motor vehicle sales drove the strong 1.4% m/m increase in retail sales in March. But there was also a big 3.3% m/m rebound in building materials …
Middle East & North Africa Chart Pack (Apr. '25) …
German retail performance has been among the worst in the euro-zone for most of the last decade. A combination of declining vacancy, better affordability and reduced online leakage point to a relative improvement. But any recovery is likely to be slow and …
March’s decline in services inflation was entirely due to transport, which in turn reflected past moves in oil prices and Easter timing effects. But the fundamentals still point to continued declines in underlying price pressures this year. And higher US …
Africa Chart Pack (Apr. 2025) …
We think China will continue to allow the renminbi to weaken, perhaps all the way to 8.0/$ . Today’s market moves in China emphasise yet again how US trade policy remains the key driver of financial markets right now. Despite a stronger-than-expected Q1 …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Dip in inflation won’t last, but weak economy will quash inflation eventually The dip in CPI inflation from 2.8% in February to 2.6% in March (CE forecast 2.6%, consensus 2.7%) …
The upcoming federal election on 3 rd May appears likely to result in a hung parliament. Although the ruling Labor party’s recent uptick in the polls suggest that it is in pole position to form a minority government, we wouldn’t count out the …
Q1 ended on a stronger note thanks to fiscal boost China’s economy regained some momentum in March thanks to fiscal support, which helped the Q1 GDP figures beat expectations. Still, this wasn ’t enough to deliver faster growth over the quarter as a …
Concerning signs for Canada’s housing market The housing market took another leg down in March, with the larger decline in single-family home prices suggesting that owner-occupiers rather than investors are behind the most recent weakness. Nonetheless, …
15th April 2025
While the dust from the market sell-off continues to settle, there are few signs that the turmoil in equity and sovereign bond markets has sparked broader instability or a self-reinforcing downward cycle. Our base case is that market conditions will …
Latin America generally got off lightly on ‘liberation day’, but the indirect effects on confidence and, more importantly, demand from China could be larger. Meanwhile, the sell-off in the region’s currencies amid the recent turmoil in financial markets …
While the big easing in market rents inflation over the past few years suggests falls in all-tenancy rents inflation are in the offing, both measures of rents inflation will probably stay above pre-pandemic rates. At its heart, rental price inflation is …
Punitive tariffs have the potential to cause a substantial fall in US imports from China – a 60% tariff, for example, could cut imports from China by about a third over the next two years, with further falls after that. Some countries that face lower US …
Gasoline-driven fall in headline inflation The downward surprise to CPI inflation in March, along with the first target-consistent gains in CPI-trim and CPI-median in eight months, at the margin raise the odds of a rate cut by the Bank of Canada tomorrow. …
Although the EU is likely to respond to US tariffs at some point, recent developments reinforce our view that it will move slowly and that any retaliation will be moderate. This should limit the damage from the trade war for Europe and is one reason why …
The ongoing fallout across financial markets from President Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcement has resulted in a sharp fall in the dollar and what looks increasingly like a generalised loss of confidence in the US as a safe haven in currency and bond …
Further fall in inflation paves way for more interest rate cuts The larger-than-expected fall in Indian consumer price inflation in March, which pushes it further below the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) 4% target, reinforces our view that the central …
Outlook clouded by tariff tensions This publication has been updated with additional analysis The increase in euro-zone industrial production for a second consecutive month in February is not a sign of a sustained recovery for the sector. Instead, it is …
The ECB’s Bank Lending Survey paints a positive picture of the housing market. Conditions for consumer credit and corporate loans were less encouraging, and the tariff chaos of the past two weeks might have made banks more cautious about lending and …
Broad-based strengthening of price pressures Saudi Arabia’s headline inflation rate picked up to 2.3% y/y in March, the fastest pace since the middle of 2023. (See Chart 1.) And inflation strengthened across most categories of the CPI basket, suggesting …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Jobs growth weakens with more to come While the jobs market weakened further, there were few signs this is feeding through to slower wage growth. But if the more uncertain …
Japan's economy will be hit less hard than many other large economies by the recent escalation of the trade war. While mounting uncertainty will keep the Bank of Japan on the sidelines for a few months, we expect the labour market to remain tight and …
The market turmoil sparked by the tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump on “Liberation day” has somewhat eased in the past couple of trading days. Absent further bad news, we think the worst has probably passed for US markets, although we see …
14th April 2025
Available data don’t give a definitive answer to whether sales by Chinese institutions contributed to the recent volatility in the US bond market. But China’s state managers of foreign assets still appear to have more than half of their portfolios …
Argentina’s latest IMF programme and the move to partially dismantle some capital controls and liberalise the exchange rate suggests policymakers are moving more quickly than we’d anticipated to restore macro orthodoxy. The parameters of the exchange rate …
The recently-announced fiscal plan in Bahrain is a welcome shift towards fiscal consolidation, but there’s a high risk of slippage and the public debt dynamics are alarming. Although other Gulf states would almost certainly step in if Bahrain faced major …
The IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Facilities with Egypt and Pakistan will incentivise policymakers to implement climate adaptation and mitigation policies. That said, both countries still need to attract significant amounts of private investment to …
Nobody knows where US tariff policy will ultimately land but one thing is starting to become clear: the Trump administration has China in its sights. The exemptions for various electronic goods, including smartphones and laptops, announced over the …
While the recent drop in crude oil prices would lower inflation a bit, that drag will be more than offset by a boost from the weaker Australian dollar. The upshot is that barring a sharp fall in business confidence, we’re sticking to our forecast that the …
A final hurrah Export growth accelerated in March, as manufacturers rushed to ship goods to the US ahead of “Liberation Day”. But shipments are set to drop back over the coming months and quarters. We think it could be years before Chinese exports regain …
Loan growth no longer slowing Bank loan growth accelerated for the first time in over two years last month, helping to take broad credit growth to a 10-month high. While some further gains are likely, we still expect a more modest pick-up compared to …
Singapore’s central bank loosened monetary policy again today and with inflation set to remain low and the economy weak, further easing looks likely in the coming quarters. The MAS conducts monetary policy by targeting the nominal effective exchange rate …
The tariff exemptions reported in the dead of night by the CBP on various electronics goods, including smartphones, semiconductors, electronic circuits and TVs, represent a partial de-escalation of President Trump’s trade war with China. The 20 product …
12th April 2025
As the dust settles after another of week of dramatic policy shifts, the picture that has emerged is a familiar one from Trump's first term: China is the main target after all. China isn't taking Trump's tariffs lying down. Instead, it has hit back tariff …
11th April 2025
After another tumultuous week across financial markets, the dollar is on track for one of its worst weeks on record. At this point, the main question for the dollar is no longer what the direct effects of President Trump’s tariffs (many of which were …
With the Swiss currency having experienced its largest two-week appreciation since the “Frankenshock” in 2015, the SNB may already have started selling francs in the FX market. We have a 25bp cut pencilled in for June, but the risks are that policymakers …
Pause on reciprocal tariffs reduces risks for CEE President Trump’s 90-day pause on “reciprocal” tariffs has reduced the scale of downside risks to the global economy, and our new working assumption is that US tariffs on most economies stay at the 10% …
Canadians shun the US, but will they spend at home? It’s been two months since Canadians began boycotting US goods and services in the wake of the aggression from President Trump over tariffs and his apparent desire to make Canada the 51 st state. The …
As we suggested in our Update from last weekend, it was only a matter of time before the increasingly adverse market reaction forced President Donald Trump to reconsider his plan to levy prohibitive reciprocal tariffs on all major trading partners. He was …
The extraordinary tariff chaos over the past week and associated fallout in the financial markets (see our coverage here ) have increased the chances that the damage to the UK from the US trade war will be larger and that inflation and interest rates will …
China rather than US trade big concern for Africa Africa’s direct damage from tariffs imposed by the US should be limited, but the indirect hit will be larger if global growth weakens, and financial spillovers materialise. After US President Trump dialed …
Stagflation on consumers’ minds The further fall in the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index in April along with the rise in both one- and five-year inflation expectations, suggests that the tariff-related fears which had soured sentiment over …
Crisis is not over, but winners could emerge Most of Asia outside China breathed a sigh of relief when Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on his “reciprocal” tariffs. However, the crisis for the region is far from over. Exports from Asia to the US …