Industry to continue facing headwinds Growth in India’s core infrastructure industries slowed in March, indicating that some of the resilience in the industrial sector at the start of the year may be fading. Domestic and external headwinds mean a …
28th April 2023
Strength at start of 2023 unlikely to be sustained The 1.1% q/q rise in Mexican GDP in Q1 marked a pick-up from the end of last year, but a fresh slowdown is on the cards as a recession in the US and tight policy at home will take their toll. The outturn …
Economy expands marginally but domestic demand falling The very small increase in GDP in Q1 means a technical recession has been avoided by a whisker. However, the economy has essentially stalled as domestic demand has been hit hard by the energy shock …
Taiwan’s GDP contracted sharply in the first quarter of the year, as a slump in exports put the economy into a technical recession. We think the economy will struggle over the coming quarters as weak external demand and a fading reopening boost drag on …
Economy may not have shrunk in Q1 The end-month data rush only adds to the dilemma the Bank of Japan is facing. While labour market conditions are now easing in earnest, underlying inflation is set to surpass 4% at the national level. On balance though, …
Economy starts the year on a weaker footing The disappointing 1.1% annualised rise in first-quarter GDP indicates that the economy had less forward momentum at the start of this year than previously thought. We continue to expect the drag from higher …
27th April 2023
Sentiment fell further in Q1 The RICS Q1 survey indicated confidence fell further in the opening months of the year but remains substantially above the lows seen during the height of the pandemic. However, we expect sentiment to drop further in the coming …
Business surveys signal resilience in activity The EC’s economic sentiment indicator for April remained consistent with the economy expanding at the beginning of Q2. It also suggests that price pressures (though easing) remain high and that labour …
Fall in sentiment points to tepid growth The EC’s Economic Sentiment Indicators (ESIs) for Central and Eastern Europe generally fell slightly in April, with our regional measure declining for the first time in six months. On past form, the ESIs suggest …
Occupier demand ticks up, but further falls in rents and capital values likely After a weak end to 2022, surveyors reported that occupier demand was essentially flat in Q1. All sectors saw an improvement and that suggests take-up will pick-up in Q2. That …
Sweden dodges recession for now News that the Swedish economy expanded slightly in Q1, and thereby narrowly avoided a recession, adds to the evidence that economic activity in Europe as a whole has held up well in Q1. That said, we still think Sweden is a …
Product demand proving solid, for now Commercial stocks fell last week as production and net imports declined. Meanwhile, product demand remains resilient, but we doubt oil demand can weather the mounting economic headwinds much longer. The EIA’s latest …
26th April 2023
Details consistent with declining equipment investment The 3.2% m/m jump in durable goods orders in March mainly reflects a stronger-than-expected gain in the more volatile commercial aircraft component, with the details suggesting that first-quarter …
Food inflation spike finally at an end The drop in Brazilian inflation to a 30-month low of 4.2% y/y in the middle of April was mainly a result of a sharp decline in food inflation, which is at its lowest rate since the start of the pandemic. With core …
Markdowns smaller in Q1, but this feels like the eye of the storm Total returns of -1.8% q/q in Q1 reflected a much smaller markdown in values than in Q4. But, looking ahead, we remain convinced that the strains being felt by many investors will drive …
RBA will deliver a final 25bp rate hike next week While inflation is moderating slightly faster than the RBA had anticipated, price gains remain far too strong to be consistent with the Bank’s 2-3% inflation target and we’re sticking to our forecast of a …
House price growth turns positive New home sales jumped in March and house prices increased 0.2% m/m in February. The continued resilience of the housing market means the risk to our forecast of an 8% drop in house prices are now to the upside. But …
25th April 2023
More wiggle room for the Chancellor The news that total borrowing in 2022/23 was £13.2bn lower than the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) predicted only a month ago provides the Chancellor with more wiggle room to cut taxes and/or raise spending …
GDP in Korea rose slightly during the first quarter of the year but we think the economy faces a difficult year ahead as high interest rates and weak external demand weigh on output. According to the advance estimate for Q1 GDP published today, the …
Fall in inflation unlikely to be enough to prevent a final 25bp rate hike The fall in Mexico’s headline inflation rate to an 18-month low of 6.2%y/y in the first half of April was broad-based and will provide some comfort to officials at Banxico that …
24th April 2023
A note of caution from the Ifo The Ifo Business Climate Index rose again in April but remained in contractionary territory. This is contrast to the PMIs which point to much stronger economic performance at the start of Q2. The small rise in the Ifo …
Weak first quarter, economy to flatline March’s activity data out of Poland were weaker than expected and suggest the economy may now be in a technical recession. Activity may start to bottom out soon, but we don’t think the economy is set for a marked …
Momentum fading After a strong start to the year, retail sales volumes dropped back in February and the preliminary estimate implies they fell again in March. While consumption probably still rose at a healthy pace in the first quarter, that weakness is a …
21st April 2023
Supply reviving, but the demand picture remains subdued There were clear signs of a pick-up in global steel production in March, led by China, but output in the EU also ticked up. However, the rise in supply is going hand in hand with increasing stocks. …
Resilience in economic activity continues into Q2 April’s flash PMIs suggest the economy is still proving resilient to the dual drags of high inflation and high interest rates going into Q2. That, alongside evidence suggesting that domestic inflationary …
Despite soggy sales, outlook for retailers a bit sunnier than it was Underlying retail sales volumes aren’t as soggy as the 0.9% m/m drop in March suggests as some of that fall was due to the unusually wet weather. The further rebound in consumer …
Exports downturn could prove short-lived April’s flash PMIs point to further upside risks to our GDP forecasts, indicating a broad improvement in both domestic and external demand. That suggests the exports downturn may be short-lived. Meanwhile, services …
Stronger yen, falling commodity prices to cool decades-high inflation Underlying inflation saw a sizeable increase in March, while headline inflation inched down thanks to falling energy prices. A stronger yen and falling import price inflation should …
Sales continue weak start to the year Existing home sales edged lower in March rounding off the weakest start to the year in over a decade. While the lending data point to further declines in April, we expect mortgage rates will fall back to 5.75% …
20th April 2023
Norsk Hydro strikes will weigh on European aluminium output Global production growth y/y slowed in March and came close to stalling. In fact, excluding China, global production growth was 0%. These latest data are consistent with our view that output …
The trade deficit narrowed in March as import values fell faster than export values. Data for Q1 so far are still consistent with a negative contribution from net trade to GDP. Export values surprised analysts to the upside, rising by 4.3% y/y in March …
Inflation is coming off the boil Although inflation in Q1 was below what the RBNZ had expected, we don’t expect the Bank to take its foot off the brakes just yet. Indeed, with non-tradables prices continuing to rise at a rapid clip, the RBNZ is likely to …
Crude production approaching peak Sharply higher refining activity and a rise in exports drove commercial crude stocks lower this week. Meanwhile, US production was stable. We think it will only rise a little further by the end of the year. The EIA’s …
19th April 2023
Contraction in industry suggests Q1 was another weak quarter Brazilian industrial production fell for a third consecutive month in February and, while the latest surveys suggest that industry held up a bit better in March, the bigger picture is that Q1 …
South African economy closer to technical recession February’s weak hard activity figures out of South Africa suggest that stronger data from January were a blip and, following a contraction in GDP in Q4, increase the chances that the economy has slipped …
Core inflation remains high Final inflation data confirmed that the drop in headline inflation in March was entirely due lower energy inflation. With the core rate not yet passed its peak, we think the ECB will raise rates to a peak of 4%. Data published …
Latest pick-up in inflation strengthens hawks’ case South Africa’s headline inflation reading for March came in stronger than expected, at 7.1% y/y, and core inflation remains uncomfortably high for policymakers at the Reserve Bank. With persistent …
Fight against inflation is lasting longer than expected Plunging energy price inflation will soon drag down CPI inflation more significantly, but the stubbornness of core inflation suggests that the fight against inflation is lasting longer than the Bank …
Slow recovery in construction activity Single-family starts rose for the second consecutive month in March which adds weight to the view that starts have bottomed out. Building permits and homebuilder confidence also edged higher. But stretched …
18th April 2023
Base effects helped to pull headline inflation lower in March, but there were also encouraging signs in core inflation, as the average three-month annualised gain in CPI-trim and CPI-median fell to a 16-month low. We continue to expect headline and core …
Wage growth eases further, but slowly The labour market became a bit less tight in February and wage growth continued to ease, albeit slowly. That leaves the Bank of England with a tough call on whether to raise interest rates further. Tomorrow’s release …
March’s net commercial real estate (CRE) lending slowed sharply following SVB’s collapse early in the month. Lending against multifamily fell for the first time in 18 months, driven by a reduction in small banks’ exposure. Along with a softening in …
17th April 2023
Further evidence of fading economic momentum The 0.5% m/m fall in manufacturing output in March provides more evidence of a loss of economic momentum going into the second quarter. While the return of temperatures to seasonal norms last month appears to …
14th April 2023
Manufacturing outlook remains challenging After a bright start to the year, manufacturing activity weakened in February. While that was partly due to temporary factors that are likely to be quickly reversed, the surveys point to a challenging outlook. The …
Sales saved by online strength Retail sales fell by 1.0% m/m in March, adding to the evidence that the strong start to the year was partly due to the unseasonably mild winter weather. With control group sales only falling by 0.3% m/m last month, …
Core inflation dips below 9% The fall in Sweden’s measure of core inflation to 8.9% in March suggests that it may now be passed its peak. But it is still much higher than the Riksbank had anticipated at its February meeting and does not change our view …
Mortgage demand still the limiting factor The headline mortgage availability balance of the credit conditions survey turned positive for the first time in over a year in Q1. The collapse of SVB while the survey was in the field probably helps explain why …
13th April 2023
Bank of England may yet need to generate a recession The stagnation in real GDP in February means the economy probably avoided recession in Q1. But it also increases the chances that the Bank of England will need to raise interest rates further to …
Survey undermines hopes of a spring awakening The marginal improvement in the headline prices paid and new buyer enquiries balance of the RICS Residential Survey did not alter the overarching message that prices are falling and sales slumping. While the …
Resilient labour market will prompt RBA to hike rates further in May The strength in March’s labour market data will probably prompt the Reserve Bank of Australia to deliver a final 25bp rate hike next month, but unemployment will rise before long . The …