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This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Inflation will rebound early this year Inflation fell again in December, driven by declines in both fresh food and energy inflation. However, the bigger picture is that inflation …
18th January 2024
Overview – The easiest wins in the disinflation battle are behind us now that base effects from the previous surge in energy prices have run their course. Indeed, we expect energy effects to lift inflation in advanced economies slightly this year. But we …
Reversal of November spike not a sign of weakness Note: We’ll be discussing our above-consensus forecasts for US house prices and construction in an online briefing on 23rd January at 10:00 EST/15:00 GMT. Register now . Housing starts fell last month …
Lenders ready to meet increasing mortgage demand The latest Credit Conditions Survey showed a rise in the availability of mortgage credit in Q4 as financial market interest rates fell, but demand for mortgages slipped as mortgage rates took time to catch …
The Bank of England’s Q4 Credit Conditions Survey suggests the worst of the drag on economic growth from higher interest rates is fading. That suggests an economic recovery will begin later this year. The net percentage balance of banks’ supply of …
Central banks in both Australia and New Zealand are likely to remain in “wait and watch” mode in the near term, given lingering risks to the inflation outlook. However, we think concerns about inflation persistence are overdone, especially with tradables …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication Labour market will turn faster than the RBA anticipates With labour market data for December disappointing expectations, we’re more convinced than ever that the RBA will take its …
Market was picking up even before latest slide in mortgage rates The December RICS Housing Market survey showed sales volumes rising and buyer demand recovering even before the further sizeable drop in mortgage rates in January. That’s encouraging for our …
CPI-trim and CPI-median are overstating inflation pressures Economy going from bad to worse Bank to start cutting interest rates in April The acceleration in the CPI-trim and CPI-median measures of core inflation in December suggests the Bank of Canada …
17th January 2024
This Global Markets Focus explains why we expect the S&P 500 to soar in 2024, in contrast to those who anticipate a much tougher year for the index after a banner 2023. Section 1 sets the scene with a brief overview of the change in the index since the …
We anticipate that mortgage rates will continue to fall in 2024, but more gradually than they have recently from 6.8% now to 6.25% by the end of the year. That won’t be enough to bring a great deal of stock on the market. At the same time, we expect a …
Manufacturing sector stagnating The muted rise in manufacturing output in December shows that the sector continues to struggle, even as consumption growth remains strong. The 0.1% m/m increase in manufacturing output in December meant that the …
Consumers end the year on a high The 0.6% m/m rise in retail sales in December may have been supported by the unseasonably mild weather, but it still means there is no sign that households are buckling under the pressure of higher interest rates with …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Downward trend stalls, but drop to below 2% still coming in April The unexpected rise in CPI inflation from 3.9% in November to 4.0% in December (consensus and CE forecast 3.8%) …
We expect GDP growth to slow to a crawl this year, weighed down by weak consumption growth and sluggish export growth. While the virtuous cycle between prices and wages has shown signs of a slowdown in recent months, it will soon receive a boost when …
In recent months, there have been growing concerns that the rapid rise in rental inflation will force the Reserve Bank of Australia to keep rates higher for longer. To be sure, leading indicators suggest that rental inflation will continue to accelerate …
Lower mortgage rates supporting demand The decline in mortgage rates appears to be supporting demand, with home sales rebounding last month. While prices continued to fall in December, the sales-to-new listing ratio is now pointing to positive house price …
16th January 2024
We are downbeat on industrial total returns over the next two years compared to the consensus because of our relatively pessimistic views on both rents and cap rates. And we think the risks to long-term returns are skewed towards the downside, which, if …
Core inflation pressures still too strong Although the rise in headline inflation in December was mainly due to gasoline price base effects, the more worrying development is that the CPI-trim and CPI-median core measures both rose by a larger 0.4% m/m. …
Tepid lending in December closes a sluggish year for activity Net lending on commercial real estate (CRE) by banks was positive again in December, rising by $4.2bn in the month. (See Table 1.) That said, the monthly change was broadly in line with the …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Wage growth fading fairly fast Another big drop in wage growth in November supports our view that domestic inflationary pressures are fading fairly fast. But the ongoing …
While overall inflation has moderated, services inflation has accelerated Bank will wait for upcoming spring wage negotiations before adjusting policy We expect a rate hike to 0.1% in March, with Yield Curve Control ending by mid-year The Bank of …
The Bank of Canada’s quarterly business and consumer surveys continue to flash warning signs about the outlook for the economy and labour market. The normalisation of inflation expectations remains painfully slow, however, presenting a risk to our view …
15th January 2024
We don’t expect the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank or Bank of England to cut rates in their first meetings of 2024, but they may drop hints about when monetary easing could start. A team of our senior economists held this online briefing after the …
There’s a popular view that the RBA won’t start cutting interest rates until later in the second half of this year. We think Australia’s Q4 CPI release on 31 st January will help build the case for those cuts to start far sooner. Our ANZ and Markets …
Will US equities continue to lead the pack in 2024? How will monetary policymaking affect the level of yields? What will this mean for FX markets? To mark the launch of our new, interactive forecast dashboards, our Markets economists hosted a special …
Temporary rebound in sales volumes The rebound in manufacturing sales in November was broad-based but, with new orders dropping back and the manufacturing surveys weakening in December, that strength is unlikely to be sustained. The 1.2% m/m rise in …
US house prices saw strong gains in 2023, defying widespread expectations for them to fall as surging mortgage rates crimped supply. Will falling borrowing costs in 2024 swamp the market with a wave of new listings or could house prices surprise to the …
We doubt the recent resilience of business investment in the face of higher interest rates will last. Instead, we think a drop back in business investment will contribute to the economy continuing to stagnate in the first half of this year and a modest …
There was a wide disparity in house price growth across regions in 2023 and little reason to think that this year will be any different. Following the recent decline in mortgage rates, we suspect the largest rises in prices will be in the regions that …
While most of the recent pick-up in services inflation has been driven by just a handful of components, there’s been an upward shift in the distribution of price changes across the CPI basket. However, even if wage growth settles at higher levels than …
With US and UK strikes on Houthis in the headlines and Taiwanese voting in their flashpoint election, Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing unpicks what the now- clichéd idea that we live in a “more dangerous world” actually means for thinking through macro …
12th January 2024
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, …
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 …
We doubt that the modest fall in mortgage rates we anticipate this year will bring a great deal more stock onto the market. Because of that, the supply of existing homes will remain very tight, so we’re now forecasting a more subdued recovery in existing …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Stagnation in Q4, but recovery in sight The 0.3% m/m rebound in real GDP in November (consensus and CE forecast 0.2%) increases the chances that the economy escaped a recession …
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 …
Consumer spending continued to tumble in Q4 The continued slowdown in household spending in November further cements our view that the RBA won’t lift rates any higher. The ABS’ monthly indicator suggests that household spending rose by 3.1% y/y in …
We think that global growth will undershoot consensus expectations in 2024 as various props to growth from 2023 fade and as the lagged effects of past rate hikes continue to feed through. Among the advanced economies, the US will continue to outperform …
11th January 2024
Core prices boosted by used vehicles & shelter The slightly bigger 0.3% m/m increases in both headline and core CPI would seem to justify the stance of Fed officials that the road back to target could be a little bumpy, but we’re not convinced. The annual …
The lagged effects of the weak economy and high interest rates may mean that loan default rates rise in the coming months. But the prospect of interest rate cuts later this year will mean they won’t rise much. Higher interest rates and the weak economy …
10th January 2024
The surge in Chapter 11 business bankruptcy filings last quarter is not as bad as it looks, as many of them related to the WeWork failure. Excluding those, bankruptcies trended lower at the end of 2023 and, with corporate bond yields falling sharply in …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Disinflation will pave the way for policy loosening before long With price pressures cooling in earnest, we’re growing increasingly confident in our call that the RBA will start …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Virtuous cycle will get renewed boost this year Wage growth slowed sharply in November, driven by a plunge in bonus payments. While we expect the labour market to soften in the …
Our total returns forecasts for 2024 are significantly below consensus, as we predict that value falls will reach double digits for the second consecutive year. Retail stands out as the only sector where we expect positive returns, but distress in the …
9th January 2024
A continued pull-back in the spreads of US private-label commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) since the start of 2024, at a time when those of US high-yield corporate bonds have edged up (see Chart 1) and “risky” assets in general have come under …