South Africa's pivotal election looms There’s less than a week to go until South Africa’s pivotal election and there remains significant uncertainty about the ANC’s vote share and, if it’s forced to go into coalition, who it will ally with. The ANC’s vote …
24th May 2024
Fed in wait-and-see mode Fed to proceed with caution The minutes of the Fed’s early May policy meeting were, not surprisingly given the backdrop of data releases ahead of that meeting, somewhat hawkish. The resilience of economic growth and employment, …
Still too early for nominal TRY appreciation The Turkish lira has been surprisingly stable over the past two months and Finance Minister Simsek noted this week that the currency would have actually appreciated had the central bank not been buying dollars …
Mexico’s election race enters the final phase Next week marks the final week ahead of Mexico’s election, in which all seats in congress, thousands of local government positions and, most importantly, the presidency are up for grabs. The opinion polls …
Natural gas bucks the trend In a week dominated by sharp falls in oil and precious metals prices, the 12% jump in European natural gas prices has been a notable outlier. Although the front-month TTF benchmark price has slipped back in trading today, at …
Durable goods orders slowly trending up Headline and core durable goods both did better than we expected in April, suggesting that the earlier decline in corporate borrowing costs may be feeding through. Nonetheless, with growth in underlying capital …
Retail sales point to soft consumption growth The broad-based nature of the weakness in retail sales in March show that high interest rates are weighing on demand and, at the margin at least, provide a bit more justification for the Bank to cut interest …
It’s tempting to think that every bit of economic data released between now and the general election on 4 th July will make a difference to who will be Prime Minister on 5 th July. Inevitably, data releases will be written up as “good” or “bad” for Sunak …
Growth slowdown begins Nigeria’s GDP growth slowed to 3.0% y/y in Q1, driven by a halving in the oil sector growth rate, alongside high inflation and tighter monetary conditions continuing to drag on the non-oil economy. We expect growth to remain …
Worrying or reassuring? The wage growth data published this week were not good for the inflation outlook, but they weren’t as bad as they first appeared. As a re-cap, data released by the ECB showed that negotiated wages rose by 4.7% y/y in Q1, slightly …
Resolution of China’s property crisis would result in residential sales being substantially higher than today. Sales could rise by a third. But we wouldn’t expect prices to increase by much, if at all. And property construction activity will be weaker in …
Pullback in deposit growth is not a bullish signal After picking up during the pandemic, growth in bank deposits has slowed sharply recently. (See Chart 1.) They even fell outright in April, by a record RMB3.9trn, though this may partly reflect …
We think the kiwi and the aussie strength will continue over the next couple of years as we expect they will be among the last developed economies to start an easing cycle. The aussie and the kiwi have been among the best performing G10 currencies since …
Singapore’s economy to remain weak this year The second estimate of first quarter GDP (published on Thursday) confirmed that growth in Singapore slowed sharply last quarter. In q/q terms, the economy expanded by just 0.1%, down from 1.2% in the final …
The mammoth general election is entering its final week, with just 115 of the 544 constituencies left to vote before the result is announced on 4 th June. Clients can see all of our election insights here . We will also be discussing the election result …
The sharp drop in frontier market sovereign dollar bond spreads this year has caught many by surprise. We think there’s a case that the bond rally may have gone too far in Argentina, Ecuador and Tunisia. But the decline in spreads in some frontiers, …
Spanish industrial rent growth beat expectations in Q1 this year, outpacing rises elsewhere in the euro-zone. However, this was mainly due to Barcelona, where we have raised our prime rent forecast. Madrid rent gains were more sluggish and this trend is …
Inflation rapidly losing momentum The economic data released over the last couple of weeks hardly suggest that the Bank of Japan should tighten monetary policy any further. After all, GDP plunged by 0.5% q/q in Q1 and the April inflation data released …
Outlook for retailers remains bright despite soggy start to Q2 The 2.3% m/m fall in retail sales volumes in April was much bigger than our forecast for a 0.5% m/m fall and the consensus forecast for a 0.4% m/m decline as the unusually wet weather …
Households seem keen on saving more The minutes of the RBA’s May meeting confirmed that the Bank discussed a rate hike in response to the upside surprises in inflation and the labour market, but ultimately decided against it. One reason was that the …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Underlying inflation will fall below 2% over coming months The sharp slowdown in underlying inflation in April had little to do with the slashing of high school fees in Tokyo …
The latest flash PMIs suggest that GDP growth in advanced economies has continued to gain momentum in Q2. And central banks may take comfort in the fact that services price pressures seem to be easing. Our estimate of the flash DM composite output PMI …
23rd May 2024
US pulling Saudi back from China’s orbit US officials this week suggested that a mooted grand deal with Saudi Arabia could be signed off in the coming weeks. This would redraw how the Kingdom aligns itself in a fracturing global economy. Jake Sullivan, …
Croatia has established itself as one of the fastest growing economies in the EU and we think that it will maintain GDP growth of around 3% p.a. over 2024-26. Income convergence – which has been rapid in recent years – will continue over the rest of this …
We still think inflation will fall faster than the Bank of England is expecting, but in the light of April’s CPI release we now expect the downward trend to be slower and smaller. As a result, we have shifted back our forecast for the timing of the first …
While the prospect of the Labour Party returning to government in the UK for the first time in 14 years might raise a few eyebrows in the financial markets, we wouldn’t put much store by the fact that some of its times in office since first forming a …
Putting the politics aside, the high number of migrants coming to the UK for work is the main reason why the number of people willing and able to work isn’t shrinking. The provisional data show that net inward migration to the UK was 685,000 in the year …
Corporate credit spreads have been near historical lows in recent weeks, and we think they will remain close to these levels in the coming months. The first two charts below illustrate how narrow the latest levels of US corporate credit spreads are …
New home sales fall in April due to high mortgage rates The spike in mortgage rates to 7.3% in April caused a sizeable drop in new home sales, as buyers decided to wait for a chance of getting a lower rate. We think this will partly reverse in May as …
The strength of healthcare employment and spending growth is because the sector is still recovering from the pandemic and also thanks to the jump in Affordable Care Act (ACA) enrolments. Employment and spending have almost caught up with their …
We think equities in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region may benefit most from improving sentiment towards China in the near term. But we think that economic / market exposures to the AI revolution, not to China, will be the bigger influence on the relative …
Having underperformed most other EMs since the pandemic, we think that returns of financial assets in South Africa will continue to disappoint. The outlook would worsen if the African National Congress (ANC) ends up forming a coalition with radical …
South Africa’s upcoming election looks set to herald a new era of coalition government. There are lots of permutations ranging from a centrist ANC-DA coalition to a so-called ‘doomsday coalition’ in which the ANC teams up with the left-wing EFF (although …
Strength of services inflation still a point of concern for Banxico The rise in Mexico’s headline inflation rate to 4.8% y/y in the first half of May was driven by another jump in agricultural price inflation. But core services inflation remained …
The metals-intensive nature of green technologies will add to demand for a host of industrial and battery metals, with green demand for copper and aluminium likely to grow twice as quickly as traditional demand for both metals has in the past. That said, …
Rates to stay on hold throughout the year Turkey’s central bank left its main policy rate unchanged at 50.00% again today and the statement continued to emphasise the need to keep interest rates high for a prolonged period. While the consensus view is for …
We don’t think the pick-up in euro-zone negotiated wage growth in Q1 will stop the ECB from cutting interest rates in June. But the continued strength of pay pressures reduces the chance of the ECB cutting rates rapidly in the second half of the year. The …
Survey provides support for summer rate cut Today’s May flash PMI survey will have provided the Bank of England with some comfort after yesterday’s stronger-than-expected inflation data for April. Crucially, the further fall in the services output prices …
Retail sales disappoint Poland’s activity data for April revealed that retail sales growth softened a bit more than expected last month, but that the weakness in industry in March was just a temporary blip. On balance, we remain comfortable with our …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Recovery continuing The PMIs for May suggest that the euro-zone economy continued to expand in Q2 while price pressures eased but remained high in the services sector. The ECB is …
UK election 2024 …
The Bank of Korea left its policy rate on hold today (at 3.5%) and appeared to indicate that interest rates would not be cut until it was confident that inflation would fall back to target. Given our view that price pressures will ease further over the …
India has made impressive progress in raising its share of global high-end electronics exports over the past few years. But, worryingly, it has failed to capture any additional market share in the lower-end manufactured goods which are typically more …
On hold, but easing likely before year-end The decision by the Bank of Korea to leave the policy rate unchanged (at 3.5%) today came as no surprise, of more interest will be the tone of the central bank’s statement and Governor Rhee’s press conference. …
FOMC stresses higher for longer The minutes of the Fed’s early May policy meeting are, not surprisingly given the backdrop of data releases ahead of that meeting, somewhat hawkish. The resilience of economic growth and employment, and particularly the …
22nd May 2024
We’ll be discussing what the election means for the economy and financial markets in a 20-minute online briefing at 9.30am BST on Thursday 23rd May. (Register here .) The general election on Thursday 4 th July, which the Prime Minister announced today, …