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This week’s data releases called into question our forecast that the UK economy will experience a soft landing, by which we mean inflation falling back to the 2.0% target without a big contraction in GDP. Could cigarettes and containers ignite the CPI? …
19th January 2024
Disinflation unlikely to stall Earlier this week, we learnt that new dwellings commencements continued in a tailspin, with housing starts falling to a 11-year low of 37,000 in Q3. That led some commentators to sound the alarm on how the resulting …
Note: Join us on our upcoming Asia Drop-in on 25th January. We’re discussing China’s missing stimulus, the Asian monetary policy outlook and much more. Register here for the 20-minute online briefing. Inflationary pressures moderating Inflation fell to an …
The latest Trans Mountain regulatory hearing will determine whether the pipeline expansion is once again delayed. That would weigh further on the outlook for exports, with external demand already very weak. Another year, another year’s delay? Admittedly, …
12th January 2024
Trump faces first test in Iowa Iowa marks the start of the primary race Donald Trump is still the prohibitive favourite to win the Republican presidential nomination. But the Iowa caucuses, which kick off the primary season this coming Monday, should …
The rebounds in CPI inflation in both the US and the euro-zone in December (from 3.1% to 3.4% and from 2.4% to 2.9% respectively) raise the question of whether the downward trend in the UK will also stall. After all, inflation in the UK has been following …
Inflationary pressures moderating The economic data released this week all suggest that the case for tighter monetary policy is diminishing. For a start, the Tokyo CPI showed that inflation excluding fresh food fell to just 2.1% in December, within …
Inflation could start with a 3 in December We explained last week why we expect the RBA to cut interest rates earlier than most anticipate and the sharp fall in inflation in November supports our view. The available data suggest that the Q4 inflation …
Fed still coy about QT end-game FOMC minutes put focus on inflation data The minutes of the mid-December FOMC meeting did not dissuade us that the Fed will start to cut interest rates from this March onwards. Admittedly, officials warned that “they would …
5th January 2024
Conditions in the housing market seem to be improving, with the local real estate board data pointing to a big improvement in the home sales-to-new listing ratio in December. While the unseasonably warm weather may have played a role and house prices …
There are still plenty of downside risks to our below-consensus forecast that the economy will stagnate in 2024 with GDP growth of 0.0%. (See here .) But the news over the past week has highlighted three upsides. First, the slide in 2-year and 5-year …
Manufacturers keep losing market share overseas Just as we predicted a few months ago, the outperformance of Japan’s stock market relative to US stocks has unwound as the yen has strengthened in recent weeks. (See Chart 1.) Chart 1: Yen/Dollar vs. …
A cooling economy will give the RBA cover Earlier this week, the Australian Financial Review published its quarterly survey of economists. By and large, the perception amongst forecasters seems to be that the RBA will retain its hawkish bias for the …
Data this week showed that the population jumped by 430,000 in the third quarter alone, almost as much as the official full-year permanent resident target of 465,000. Nonetheless, the November CPI data showed a much-needed slowdown in rent inflation, …
22nd December 2023
This week saw a renewed attempt from some Fed officials to push back against market expectations for interest rate cuts but, with core PCE inflation running at an annualised pace of below 2% over the past six months, this final flurry of hawkishness isn’t …
Revised data showing that real GDP contracted by 0.1% in Q3 has fuelled the debate as to whether the UK entered a technical recession over the second half of this year. But focussing on small falls (or increases) in GDP misses the point: the bigger …
Wage growth poised to lose momentum Earlier this week, we found out that Westpac’s leading index edged up once again in November and is consistent with a pickup in economic growth over the next six months. That raises the risk that labour demand will be …
Policy rate hike in January now looking unlikely It came as a surprise to no one that the Bank of Japan left policy settings unchanged at this week’s meeting . Even so, yields on 10-year JGBs plunged by nearly 10bp since then, whereas 10-year Treasury …
Household net worth fell in the third quarter, although the recent resurgence in bond and equity prices means that should soon be reversed. It is too soon to sound the all-clear for households’ finances, however, given that the debt service ratio is set …
15th December 2023
Fed & markets catching up with inflation reality The Fed’s embrace of interest rate cuts next year is understandable when the latest data suggest that core PCE inflation is rapidly closing in on the 2% target. The plunge in expectations in the aftermath …
If the main objective this week of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) was to keep interest rates unchanged at 5.25% and avoid fuelling even more bets on rate cuts, then it looks like a case of mission accomplished. Even so, the Bank’s …
“Big Australia” isn’t going anywhere We found out yesterday that population growth in Australia hit a record high of 2.4% y/y in Q2, as the post-pandemic boom in net overseas migration continued apace. (See Chart 1.) Moreover, we estimate that, allowing …
Services sector running red-hot The strong Q4 Tankan released this week adds to the case for the Bank of Japan to abandon ultra-loose monetary policy. Of particular importance is that the Tankan shows mounting signs of overheating in the services …
Markets call the Fed’s bluff on higher for longer Markets abandon higher for longer The Fed may not be quite ready to abandon its tightening bias at this week’s FOMC meeting, but the markets are no longer buying its “higher for longer” mantra. Markets …
8th December 2023
The Bank of Canada this week reiterated that strong immigration is putting upward pressure on inflation because housing supply is failing to keep up. Yet the Bank surely can’t be oblivious to the negative impact of high interest rates on construction. …
The further drop in UK market interest rate expectations this week means that investors now think the first interest rate cut will happen in June next year instead of August. And investors are now pricing in an 80% chance of a cut by May. That has led to …
Services inflation continues to accelerate The economic data released this week seem to vindicate the Bank of Japan’s caution when it comes to abandoning ultra-loose monetary policy. For a start, the timely Tokyo CPI showed that inflation slowed from …
Not higher, not longer Earlier today, the Treasury and the RBA published an updated Statement on the Conduct of Monetary Policy. The revised statement clarified that the RBA’s objective is to return inflation to the mid-point of its 2-3% target. That led …
Despite strong growth, core inflation normalising Q3 growth up, Q4 down This week’s modest upward revision to third-quarter GDP growth, which is now estimated to have been as strong as 5.2% annualised, rather than 4.9%, was certainly eye-catching. It …
1st December 2023
The revisions to the national accounts leave the post-pandemic recovery looking stronger than we thought. But that is partly due to intense inventory building, which leaves the economy vulnerable to a period of destocking now that demand is weakening. …
The prospect of earlier interest rate cuts in the US and the euro-zone has led to a sharp fall in US and euro-zone government bond yields this week. 10-year US Treasury and German Bund yields have fallen by 15 and 22 basis points (bps), to 4.32% and 2.43% …
Consumption falling but labour market tightening The October activity data were a mixed bag. While industrial production rose by 1% m/m, firms’ forecasts for the next couple of months were weak and point to a stagnation in output across Q4 following …
House prices falling again in Sydney and Melbourne Data released by CoreLogic today showed that house prices rose by 0.6% m/m in seasonally-adjusted terms in November, the smallest rise since April. And CoreLogic’s daily data show that house price …
It would be a stretch to say the government showed fiscal restraint in the Fall Economic Statement , but the announcement of only a few billion dollars in extra spending measures means that Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland did not pour much more fuel on …
24th November 2023
It’s true that the Chancellor’s pre-election splurge unveiled in this week’s Autumn Statement was the largest discretionary fiscal loosening (outside of the Covid period) since 2010. And at £20.3bn (0.6% of GDP) in 2028/29, it was the biggest tax-cutting …
Disapproval rating highest since Suga resignation The Cabinet Office’s disapproval rating has surpassed 50% for the first time since Fumio Kishida became Prime Minister two years ago. Surely one reason is the 5% plunge in real household disposable …
Surveys point to renewed slowdown in inflation Following a rather hawkish speech by Reserve Bank of Australia Michele Bullock, the financial markets now price in a 60% chance of another 25bp rate hike at the Bank’s February’s meeting, up from 40% before …
Post-SVB bank lending holding up well Credit where credit is due The SVB crisis back in mid-March sparked fears of a credit crunch, particularly among regional banks who are the principal source of funding for commercial real estate. Post-SVB, while the …
22nd November 2023
Falling inflation prompts rate cut speculation Better inflation news prompts big market moves The release of the slightly-better-than-expected October CPI data earlier this week triggered a massive reaction in markets, with the two-year Treasury yield …
17th November 2023
For the first time since the pandemic, the government will find itself with less fiscal room than expected when it provides an update of its plans next week. Accordingly, we doubt that the Fall Economic Statement will contain any major giveaways. Gloomy …
We’ll be discussing the UK macro and market consequences of the Chancellor’s Autumn statement at 10:00 EST/15:00 GMT on 22nd November. Register here for this 20-minute online briefing. The Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, will want to use next Wednesday’s Autumn …
Recent export resilience unlikely to last While the Q3 GDP release disappointed this week, there was some (qualified) good news in the October trade data. Although headline export growth slowed to 1.6% y/y, from 4.3% in September, a deceleration had been …
Spare capacity is opening up The ABS published a flurry of data this week, which prima facie suggest the labour market is still running red hot. Nevertheless, we remain confident in our decision to call time on the RBA’s tightening cycle . That’s largely …
Energy disinflation; credit conditions still tight Crude oil price slump to bolster disinflation Despite the ongoing war in the Middle East, crude oil prices have slumped – with the WTI benchmark down from a peak of more than $90 per barrel in late …
10th November 2023
The Bank of Canada’s latest Summary of Deliberations was more hawkish than most probably expected, with some members of the Governing Council still seemingly arguing for further rate hikes. That said, the weak GDP data released since the Bank’s last …
We may have to wait a bit longer for the start of the mild recession that we have been forecasting. The published quarterly growth rate of real GDP of 0.0% in Q3 implies that the economy stagnated. Although technically real GDP fell by 0.03% q/q (or £163 …
Edging away from ultra-loose policy The “Summary of Opinions” from last week’s Bank of Japan Monetary Policy Meeting released yesterday show a Policy Board increasingly confident that the long-term 2% target is coming into sight. The likelihood of …
One and done for the RBA The main event this week was the RBA delivering a widely-anticipated 25bp rate hike at its meeting on Tuesday. Our assessment is that the increase in the cash rate is essentially something of an insurance policy, aimed at ensuring …
There is now mounting evidence that the economy is set for a renewed slowdown in the fourth quarter and that inflationary pressures from the labour market continue to ease. Although markets have already moved to price out any real chance of further rate …
3rd November 2023
Employment edged up in October but the broad-based weakness of GDP growth, the depressed business surveys and the rapidly weakening housing market all suggest that the economy is in the early stages of recession. GDP probably contracted again last quarter …