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The May trade release underscored the difficulties facing exporters. On the face of it the data were positive, as exports rose by 1.1% while imports fell by 1.6% m/m. This was off the back of a grim April when the trade deficit widened to $7.6bn, however, …
4th July 2025
Today (Friday 4 th July) marks the one-year anniversary of the government’s election victory. But on Wednesday this week it looked like there was a chance that the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, wasn’t going reach the milestone after the Prime Minister …
A cut remains more likely than not There is a growing sense amongst most observers that the Reserve Bank of Australia will deliver a 25bp cut at its meeting ending on 8 th July. Indeed, markets are pricing in a whopping 95% chance of that outcome. And …
Japan back in the doghouse The temporary pause on the 24% “reciprocal” tariff Trump imposed on imports from Japan in April is due to expire next week. As things stand, a deal with Japan looks unlikely and it’s possible that Japan will face even higher …
With the House seemingly on the cusp of passing the Senate’s revised budget reconciliation bill, the House looks set to support larger fiscal deficits over the next 10 years than it originally supported. The CBO estimated that the Senate bill would add …
3rd July 2025
With activity having rebounded strongly in Q1 and headline inflation firming up, the RBNZ is likely to leave rates unchanged at 3.25% next week. However, we’re not convinced that the economy has turned the corner. And with the output gap set to remain …
2nd July 2025
The CPI data showed the Bank of Canada’s preferred CPI-trim and CPI-median core measures rose by an average of 0.2% m/m in May, which was lower than in the previous month but still a bit too strong for comfort. Several goods prices rose strongly, as was …
27th June 2025
With the Fed divided between doves calling for a rate cut as early as July and hawks expecting no further easing this year, Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a careful balance in his semi-annual testimony to Congress this week. He offered no signal that a …
There were two key developments for the inflation outlook this week. First, some of the upside risk to CPI inflation posed by the conflict in the Middle East and higher energy prices has subsided. After the price of Brent oil ended the UK business day on …
Tokyo election defeat is a red herring The poor showing of the LDP in Sunday’s metropolitan election in Tokyo is probably a red herring. While the number of seats the LDP won in Tokyo fell to a record low, the share of people that intend to vote for the …
The Summary of Deliberations from the Bank of Canada’s June policy meeting, released on Tuesday, revealed it held rates for three reasons: the economy had slowed but not significantly, uncertainty remained high, and recent inflation data had firmed. …
20th June 2025
Fed remains firmly on the sidelines The Fed’s new interest rate projections still just about show a median of 50bp of cuts to its policy rate for this year, but it was a very close run thing. Back in March, 11 of 19 officials anticipated two 25bp cuts …
At our in-person Roundtables in London on Tuesday 1st July, clients can discuss with our economists and their peers how the government has influenced the economy in its first year in office. (Register here .) Upside risk to inflation from Middle East …
Downside risks persist in Australia Australian employment unexpectedly fell by 2,500 last month, as a 38,700 rise in full-time employment was more than offset by a 41,200 fall in part-time employment. However, with the unemployment rate holding steady at …
Case for tighter monetary policy remains strong The Bank of Japan tweaked its bond purchases at this week’s meeting but retained the dovish tone adopted at its May meeting. Indeed, the minutes of the May meeting showed that Board members were worried …
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Monday that the Department of National Defence would receive an additional $9.2bn (0.4% of GDP) this fiscal year, raising total defence spending to NATO’s 2% of GDP target. This is five years ahead of the timeframe …
13th June 2025
We’ll be discussing the outlook for Bank of England, Fed and ECB policy in a 20 minute online Drop-In at 3pm BST on Thursday 19th June. (Register here .) If the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, was hoping that at the end of the week of her Spending Review we’d …
Downside risks growing There are growing signs that economic conditions in Australia have continued to weaken. According to a new NAB business survey, business conditions fell to their lowest point since August 2020 last month. On past form, the data are …
Government officials confirmed this week that talks are ongoing between Canada and the US over a new trade and security deal after the two countries’ leaders met in Washington last month. While little has been given in the way of a timeline, there is …
6th June 2025
Fiscal policy back in focus With confidence-sapping fiscal “black holes” and rises in business taxes dominating much of her first year in office, the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will finally get to splash the cash by announcing a series of infrastructure …
Lingering inflation risks complicate matters There is no sugarcoating the fact that Australia’s economic recovery is struggling to take off. National accounts data released this week showed that real GDP grew by just 0.2% q/q in Q1, well below the 0.45% …
Court rulings leave trade policy in disarray Although this week’s court ruling – that President Trump doesn’t have the “unbounded authority” to impose universal tariffs on other countries – has been temporarily stayed, there is a fair chance that even …
30th May 2025
We have consistently argued that the influence of Trump’s tariffs on the UK economy would be modest. As a result, the impact on UK GDP of the eventual outcome of the US court ruling on the legality of the 10% universal tariff will probably also be small. …
A very brief reprieve The ruling by the US Court of International Trade this week (see here ), albeit quickly put on hold, raises the possibility that the US’ 25% fentanyl-related tariffs on non-USMCA compliant imports from Canada will soon be a thing of …
Firms upbeat about production outlook The latest activity data suggest that if anything, Japan is benefitting from trade tensions. To be sure, industrial production declined in April, but output of motor vehicles rose despite the 25% US tariff on auto …
RBNZ will loosen policy further still As virtually everyone had expected, the RBNZ cut its Official Cash Rate from 3.5% to 3.25% at its meeting this Wednesday. However, the revelation that one member voted to leave rates unchanged came as a surprise to …
How concerning is underlying inflation? The removal of the carbon tax pushed headline inflation down to 1.7% in April, comfortably in the bottom half of the Bank of Canada’s 1% to 3% target range. Nonetheless, the acceleration of the Bank’s preferred …
23rd May 2025
The headline news this week was the bigger-than-expected leap in CPI inflation from 2.6% in March to 3.5% in April. (See here .) It would be easy to conclude that most of the increase was due to one-off price rises that will stay in the inflation rate for …
Inflation fight isn't over yet While the RBA’s decision to cut rates by 25bp at its meeting on Tuesday was widely expected, the Board’s overtly dovish messaging still caught most observers off guard. Indeed, Governor Bullock made news in her post-meeting …
The softening housing market has mostly flown under the radar, but that is soon likely to change following April’s data, which showed house prices taking another sharp leg down. Combined with the steep decline in manufacturing sales volumes reported for …
16th May 2025
Tariff man triumphant Following the agreement between the US and China to reverse most of the prohibitive tit-for-tat tariffs imposed a month earlier, stock markets have rallied further this week. The S&P 500 is now closing in on the high reached in …
The implications of the government’s latest policies for the economy bring to mind the quote “what the right hand giveth, the left hand taketh away”. The right hand – EU reset In the right hand is the UK-EU reset, which will begin on Monday to much pomp …
Inflationary pressures linger on In case you missed it, our RBA Watch explains why we expect the Bank to cut rates by 25bp, to 3.85%, at its meeting next week. However, we suspect that the cut will be a somewhat hawkish one, with the Board reluctant to …
Lower energy prices will weigh on inflation The truce reached between China and the US over the weekend is a clear positive for Japan’s economy. Even so, we suspect that weak economic activity coupled with an impending plunge in inflation will delay …
Diversifying away from the US? This week’s data releases showed a sharp fall in trade flows between Canada and the US in March, following the imposition of some tariffs by the US and retaliatory tariffs by Canada. Canada’s exports to the US fell by 6.6% …
9th May 2025
UK-US trade announcement is no big deal The “full and comprehensive” trade deal between the US and the UK announced this week by President Donald Trump was none of those things. This rush to demonstrate progress on “deals” reveals a rising desperation …
Five months ago, we incorporated a 10% tariff on all UK goods exports to the US in our forecast. That has turned out to be a good call. Despite this week’s UK-US trade deal, the 10% “baseline” tariff remains. (See here for our response to the US-UK trade …
No signs of progress in US-Japan trade talks Preliminary data for the first twenty days of April point to export values rising by 0.7% m/m, according to our seasonal adjustment. However, that follows big swings across the first quarter, including a 5.7% …
Data flashing mixed signals On the face of it, developments this week strengthen the case for the RBA to err on the side of looser policy, rather than simply withdraw monetary restraint. For starters, the ABS’ Household Spending Indicator suggests that …
The 0.3% annualised contraction in first-quarter GDP generated a lot of headlines this week. In contrast, final sales to private domestic purchasers rose by a solid 3.0%, implying there was plenty of strength in the underlying economy. Nevertheless, the …
2nd May 2025
Magic Carney The Liberals won 169 seats in the election this week, just missing out on the 172 required for a majority. Nonetheless, that was still a momentous result for the Liberals considering they were, at one point earlier this year, projected to …
The larger-than-expected fall in the Nationwide measure of house prices in April has raised concerns about how quickly the housing market is losing momentum. After price gains of 1.1% m/m and 0.7% m/m in November and December last year, prices are down …
RBA still on track to deliver shallow easing cycle This week we learnt that Australia’s trimmed mean inflation fell from 3.2% in Q4 to 2.9% in Q1, returning it to the RBA’s 2-3% target band for the first time in over three years. While that outturn was …
Few signs of sharp slowdown in activity With trade tensions clouding prospects for Japan’s economy, the Bank of Japan revised down its GDP growth forecasts sharply at its meeting on Thursday and sounded more dovish than it did in January. One channel …
Both major political parties unveiled their election platforms over the past week, featuring their fiscal projections for the next four years. As expected, the Liberals have made little attempt to balance the budget. Incumbent Prime Minister Mark Carney …
25th April 2025
The negative reaction in financial markets undoubtedly played a key role in making President Trump reconsider his eye-wateringly high tariffs on China and his ill-advised plans to fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell. But we suspect the dawning reality of what …
The fall in market interest rate expectations since ‘Liberation Day’ is striking. On 31 st March, investors were pricing in just two more 25 basis points (bps) interest rate cuts this year from 4.50% now to 4.00%. Now they are fully pricing in three more …
Case for aggressive easing remains weak Flash PMI data released this Wednesday suggest that ongoing global tensions are doing little to dent business confidence in Australia. Although firms reported a second successive decline in new export business as a …
Underlying inflation set to surpass 3% Inflation excluding fresh food and energy picked up from 2.6% to 2.9% in March. And the big jump in inflation in Tokyo in April at first glance would suggest that the Bank of Japan is starting to fall behind the …
Markets were almost evenly split on what the Bank of Canada would do yesterday, right up until the last minute. In the end, the Bank opted to keep interest rates unchanged at 2.75%, rather than loosen policy by an additional 25bp. In his opening …
17th April 2025