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Housing past the worst, but risks remain House prices edged up in March and the jump in the sales-to-new listing ratio implies they will rise further this quarter. With affordability still very stretched, we assume that there will be a renewed period of …
19th April 2023
We think price pressures remained elevated in New Zealand in Q1 (22.45 BST) Sign-up here for tomorrow’s Drop-in on our revamped financial condition indices… …and here to catch up on yesterday’s Drop-In on China’s post-lockdown recovery Key Market …
The recent undershooting of CPI used vehicle prices relative to wholesale auction prices appears, at least partly, to reflect a squeeze on dealer margins as demand has cooled. The upshot is that we shouldn’t necessarily expect the CPI measure to catch up …
This Update was originally published on 19 th April. We have updated the data, charts and text to reflect the growing divergence between inflation in the UK and elsewhere evident after today’s release of the UK inflation figures for May. Clients can read …
We think investors’ expectations for the Fed funds rate will fall a little by the end of this year, which will push the 10-year Treasury yield a bit lower by end-2023. But we doubt lower “risk-free” rates would be enough to prevent a sharp drop in the S&P …
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 …
Stubborn core inflation points to one more rate hike…at least The smaller-than-expected fall in CPI inflation in March, from 10.4% in February to 10.1% (consensus/CE 9.8%, BoE Feb MPR 9.2%) and the stubbornness of core inflation, which stayed at 6.2% …
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 …
18th April 2023
Note: We discussed our revamped FCIs and took your questions on global financial conditions in a 20-minute online briefing on Thursday, 20 th April . Watch the recording here . We have revamped our financial conditions indices (FCIs) for advanced …
Core inflation pressures continue to ease While base effects helped to pull headline inflation sharply lower in March, there were also some encouraging signs in core inflation, as the average three-month annualised gain in CPI-trim and CPI-median fell to …
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 …
Wage growth easing albeit 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 of …
Inflation concerns will prompt a final 25bp rate hike in May The minutes of the RBA’s April meeting reinforce our view that the decision to leave rates on hold did not signal an end to the Bank’s tightening cycle. Indeed, the Board did discuss the case …
As the dust settles on March’s banking sector turmoil, there’s intensifying focus on how credit is being affected by heightened fear. But, with lags in data and established market indicators giving only partial views, are investors getting a clear picture …
17th April 2023
While US equity REITs are a long way from discounting the “best of times” for US commercial real estate (CRE) over the coming quarters, listed real estate stocks in Europe appear braced for something not far off the “worst of times”. That is a difference …
Recent events have highlighted that meeting regulatory capital and liquidity requirements does not guarantee that banks will be financially stable. The forthcoming EU bank stress test results should give a better idea of the banks’ health, but those tests …
Shift towards cheaper homes challenges statisticians The divergence between the Nationwide and Halifax House Price Indices (HPIs) of late has cast some doubt on the direction of house prices. A struggle to adjust the statistics for a shift towards cheaper …
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem used his press conference this week to push back against expectations for interest rate cuts later this year. That partly reflects the Bank’s less downbeat assessment of the economic outlook, but the nascent rebound in …
14th April 2023
Overview – We have made substantial downgrades to our metro-level forecasts this quarter. The outlook for office-based employment growth has been hit by tech sector struggles, weighing on demand in many western markets. We have also pushed through bigger …
The strength of the March CPI data may be enough to persuade the Fed to squeeze in a final 25bp rate hike at the early-May FOMC meeting. But with mounting evidence that economic growth is weakening again, we doubt that strength will last much longer. Core …
Small rebound in confidence suggests no big hit from bank turmoil The small rebound in the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index in early April suggests that the easing of the crisis in the banking sector has reassured consumers. Nevertheless, …
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 …
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, …
Further evidence of fading economic momentum The 0.5% m/m fall in manufacturing output in March provides yet more evidence of a significant loss of economic momentum going into the second quarter. While the return of temperatures to seasonal norms last …
Surge in household incomes unlikely to be sustained The UK economy has continued to be more resilient to the twin drags of higher inflation and higher interest rates than we thought. Real GDP was flat in February despite an extra drag from the strikes. …
Sales boosted 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, …
Data point to positive growth in Q1 The latest official activity data suggest that the euro-zone economy posted a small expansion in Q1. Admittedly, retail sales fell in February, continuing the downward trend they have been on for over a year. But lower …
On April 13 th a three-member panel delivered its review of Australia’s migration system to the Home Affairs minister, Claire O’Neil. Although the review is unlikely to be published before next month, it is already stoking debate over whether the ongoing …
Ueda has his eye on wage growth Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda noted in his inaugural press conference this week that more time is needed to see if wage growth can be sustained at a level where it will support inflation at or above the 2% target. So …
Recent data appear to confirm that economic activity held up better than feared at the start of 2023. Retail sales rose in most major economies over the first two months of the year, world industrial production was broadly stable and China’s zero-COVID …
13th April 2023
The fading effects of the mini-budget meant that bank lending conditions to households and businesses didn’t deteriorate any further in Q1. But the latest credit conditions survey doesn’t capture the full extent of the tightening triggered by recent …
Despite the cost-of-living crisis, the leisure sector did better than expected last year as households used the savings they had built up during the pandemic to boost spending on recreation and restaurants. But with those savings now exhausted and real …
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 …
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 …
Continuing to dodge recession The stagnation in real GDP in February (consensus +0.1%, CE 0.0%) 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 …
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 53,000 rise in employment last month was much stronger than most had …
Fed uncertain about impact that banking turmoil will have on economy The minutes of the Fed’s mid-March policy meeting are, overall, arguably dovish since in the wake of the collapse of SVB and Signature Bank, “several participants noted that…they …
12th April 2023
The Bank of Canada delivered a mixed message today, noting that it is more confident inflation will decline in the next few months, but less confident that inflation will fall all the way to 2.0% as quickly as previously anticipated. Nonetheless, with the …
We expect a surge in completions and a slowdown in employment growth to push vacancy substantially higher in all markets over the next few years. That will slam the brakes on rental growth, causing an outright fall in several of the major markets as well …
The Bank of Canada delivered mixed messages today, noting that it is more confident that inflation will decline in the next few months but less confident that inflation will return to 2% as quickly as it previously anticipated. Nonetheless, with the …
Core inflation remains elevated despite easing in shelter There were some encouraging signs in the March CPI report, including the first evidence that shelter inflation is slowing, but core prices still increased by 0.4% m/m which, on an annualised basis, …
Core inflation remains elevated despite easing in shelter There were some encouraging signs in the March CPI report, including the first evidence that housing cost inflation is slowing, but core prices still increased by 0.4% m/m which, on an annualised …
Japan has escaped the recent banking turmoil in the US and Switzerland relatively unscathed. While banks face some risks arising from their lending exposure overseas , there are no signs of liquidity stress. And unrealised losses on bonds are less of a …
Another bearish signal on Q1 business investment The fall in “core” machinery orders in February is another bearish signal on business investment last quarter. Domestic machine tool orders suggest a further fall in March, but even if “core” machinery …
Another bearish sign for business investment in Q1 “Core” machinery orders fell by 4.5% m/m in February, following a 9.5% rise in January. Orders from the manufacturing sector saw a strong 10.2% m/m rebound, largely due to a huge spike in orders from the …
House prices rebounded in March but we aren’t convinced that this marks the beginning of a sustained rebound. Affordability is set to become the most stretched since the early 90s and if the unemployment rate rises as rapidly as we anticipate, house …
11th April 2023