At first glance, the 1.1% m/m increase in Adzuna job vacancies in July, the first monthly rise this year, together with the fall in the unemployment rate to 4.2% in June and the 127,000 rebound in employment between April and June, suggests the recent …
23rd August 2024
The muted gains in the Bank of Canada’s preferred core price measures in July make another interest rate cut at the September meeting seem inevitable. The Bank will be encouraged by the second soft monthly gain in rents, which may be a sign that we have …
Heading for a better third quarter Despite the 0.1% m/m gain in June, retail sales volumes contracted last quarter, suggesting that household consumption growth also slowed. Prospects for the third quarter look better, with the preliminary estimate …
Although the EU is making progress in expanding its semiconductor production capacity, including through a new plant in Dresden, it is still a long way behind the US and Asia and is unlikely to catch up anytime soon. This will keep the EU reliant on …
Still trying to fix the destocking scheme At a press conference today, the Ministry of Housing pledged to accelerate the purchase of unsold homes for conversion into affordable housing. Exactly how it intends to go about that is unclear. The national …
Africa Chart Pack (Aug '24) …
RBI Governor pushes back against change to target A longstanding debate in Indian policymaking circles over which measure of consumer price inflation the RBI should target has been reignited in recent weeks. In the Government’s Annual Economic Survey …
Europe Commercial Property Chart Pack (Q3 2024) …
Underlying inflation falling below 2% According to a recent survey, 57% of analysts predict another rate hike by year-end, with one-third thinking it will happen in October and the remainder favouring the December meeting. In his parliamentary hearing …
Restrictive policy will do its job Earlier this week the Reserve Bank of Australia published the minutes of its August meeting, which showed that the Board remains concerned about upside inflation risks. In particular, the Bank noted that there was likely …
Currency concerns abating Three central banks announced policy decisions this week and all three kept rates on hold. At first glance then, an uneventful week. But there were dovish signs across the board that suggest all three will ease policy soon. We …
Underlying inflation will fall below 2% With underlying inflation falling below 2% for the first time since 2022 and set to decline further, the case for further monetary tightening is starting to diminish. Headline inflation held steady at 2.8% in July, …
After six consecutive years of underperformance, retail outperformed the all-property average in 2023. With the sector well down the road to dealing with the combined effects of e-commerce, oversupply of retail space and the pandemic lockdowns, we think …
22nd August 2024
Even though Treasury yields have edged up today ahead of Jerome Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole tomorrow, we think there’s still some scope for them to rise further, as we think too much easing is now discounted in money markets. That said, we don’t think …
The Q2 GDP data out of Emerging Europe have generally disappointed to the downside, and leading indicators have weakened at the start of Q3. With interest rates likely to be kept high in Russia and Turkey over the coming months, we think that a further …
The latest flash PMIs suggest that strong activity in the service sector has continued to support GDP growth in advanced economies in Q3, but that the outlook has worsened somewhat. Meanwhile, services price pressures have continued to ease, meaning …
Overview – Commercial property yields and capital values have stabilised in recent months, which has encouraged investors to dip their toes back into the sector. But the recovery is set to be a weak one. Admittedly, we expect rental growth will be a …
You can find all our research on Mexico's election on a dedicated webpage . The swearing in of a new congress next month gives Mexico’s outgoing president, Amlo, a one month window to re-start plans to pass controversial planned constitutional …
Lower rates set the stage for a recovery in activity The small rebound in existing home sales in July seems underwhelming after last month’s large drop in mortgage rates, but the data are based on completed transactions and so it will take at least …
US corporate credit spreads have all but unwound the rise they saw during the recent market turbulence, and are back at very low levels by past standards. (See Chart 1.) We expect them to remain compressed over the next year or so, as long as the US …
The fall in Mexican inflation in the first half of August, to 5.2% y/y, alongside clear signals from the Fed that it will start loosening monetary policy next month, supports our view that Banxico will continue its easing cycle with another 25bp cut in …
Ceasefire seems a long way off Despite the US government’s efforts to push for a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas this week, a deal seems some way off. The economic spillovers from the war in Gaza have been largest for the economies of Egypt, …
There’s growing optimism that South Africa’s economy is set for a period of faster growth under the Government of National Unity (GNU). And we think a combination of lower interest rates and higher consumer spending will help to lift demand in the near …
The scale of the fall in negotiated wage inflation in Q2 was largely due to one-off payments made in Germany in March but not repeated in Q2. However, the underlying trend in wage inflation is clearly downwards and is a good reason to expect the ECB to …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Fading price pressures support the case for more rate cuts this year August’s composite PMI provides further evidence that some of the recent strength of activity in the first …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. August PMIs still consistent with economic slowdown The rise in the flash PMIs for August is not as good as it looks as it was largely due to a boost from the Paris Olympics and …
A soft start to Q3 The weaker-than-expected batch of Polish activity figures for July is more likely to be a blip than the start of a soft patch. We remain comfortable with our view that Poland’s economy will expand by around 3% over the year as a whole, …
The Bank of Korea left rates on hold again today but sounded very dovish. With policymakers now more confident about achieving their inflation target and domestic demand set to remain weak, we think the BoK will start to cut rates in October and that the …
Rate cuts likely in October The decision by the Bank of Korea to leave interest rates unchanged (at 3.5%) today came as no surprise, but of more interest will be the tone of Governor Rhee’s press conference and the central bank’s statement later in the …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Flash PMI points to further rapid rebound in activity The rise in the composite PMI to a 16-month high suggests that the strong rebound in activity that started last quarter …
Fed minutes confirm September rate cut The minutes of the Fed’s late July policy meeting showed broad agreement that “it would likely be appropriate to ease policy at the next meeting” in September. While the weak July Employment Report released since …
21st August 2024
Central bankers are unlikely to offer much forward guidance at this weekend’s Jackson Hole symposium, preferring to stress their “data dependence”. Since most economies are expanding, inflation is easing back to target and financial markets have …
We don’t think the slew of inflation-busting public sector pay deals that have been agreed by the new government will prevent wage growth from slowing next year to the rates of 3.0-3.5% we think are consistent with the 2.0% inflation target. But the big …
Downward revisions leave employment growth still healthy The 818,000 downward revision implied by the preliminary benchmark estimate to the non-farm payroll data were roughly in line with what we had expected based on the earlier data implied by the …
We think Asian currencies will generally continue to rise against the US dollar over time, albeit perhaps not quite as quickly as they have lately. A lot of attention has focused lately on the rally of the Japanese yen. But it’s worth taking note of the …
Capital flows into EMs reversed course during the bout of market turmoil earlier this month. But the decline was no larger than that seen in other risk-off periods this year and inflows have since rebounded sharply, in line with the broader recovery in …
With the Fed set to finally start loosening policy and a soft landing still looking like the most probable outcome for the US economy, we think unfavourable rate differentials and continued robust risk appetite will lead to some further weakness in the US …
China’s announcement last week that it would curb exports of antimony, a critical mineral, was another example of global fracturing unfolding in the commodities arena. Recycling offers an obvious way for the US and its allies to shore up their own …
Inflation plunge seals the deal on a rate cut in September The larger-than-expected decline in South Africa’s headline inflation rate, to 4.6% y/y, in July strengthens the case for the SARB to start its easing cycle with a 25bp cut to 8.00% at its next …
Bank Indonesia today left its policy rate unchanged at 6.25%, but the central bank’s dovish commentary supports our view that rates will be cut before the end of the year. Today’s decision was correctly predicted by all 30 analysts polled by Reuters, …
Thailand’s central bank (BoT) today left interest rates unchanged but if, as we expect, growth slows further and inflation remains very low, we think the central bank will start loosening policy from October. Today’s decision came as little surprise and …
This page has been updated with additional analysis since first publication. Limited wiggle room for the Chancellor at the Budget July’s public finances figures continued the recent run of bad news on the fiscal position, with public borrowing on track to …
We believe that employment growth isn’t as strong as the Australian Bureau of Statistics is reporting because net migration seems to have weakened more sharply than the ABS is assuming. While it will take many months for the labour force survey to reveal …
Nearly all of the pullback in the S&P 500 since the bout of rotation in the stock market began in the wake of June’s CPI report on 11 th July has now been reversed. Admittedly, the same cannot be said for the rotation itself. But we remain of the view …
20th August 2024
The South African Reserve Bank’s (SARB’s) new “supercore” inflation measure adds yet another piece of evidence that price pressures are being brought under control. We think the SARB should now be confident that it can start its interest rate cutting …
Retail real estate has faced a tough period, buffeted by the rise of e-commerce, extensive oversupply and the impacts of the pandemic on in-store shopping. But we think the sector is well down the road to dealing with those challenges and now offers a …
The prevailing view that, over the medium term, Colombia will maintain its position as Latin America’s fastest-growing major economy looks overly optimistic in light of the collapse in its savings and investment rates. GDP growth is more likely to come in …