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We think the three main economic themes of 2023 will be falling inflation, peaking interest rates and recession. We explained these forecasts in detail in our recent UK Economic Outlook , which carried the title a “A tough year”. (See here .) In short, …
16th December 2022
The Bank of Canada’s 50bp rate hike this week means that variable mortgage rates are now more than 400bp higher than the start of the year. This raises the risk that some will be forced to sell their homes, although there was little evidence of …
9th December 2022
If you haven’t started your Christmas shopping, you may not be alone. Both the CBI Distributive Trades Survey and the CHAPS spending data point to a fall in retail sales volumes in November. The BRC/KPMG Retail Sales Monitor, which has a somewhat …
The national accounts data provided two pieces of good news this week, with revisions to the historical series and stronger-than-expected third-quarter growth leaving GDP higher than expected. While some argue that this will cause the Bank of Canada to …
2nd December 2022
This week’s data releases showed that higher interest rates are starting to influence the economy. This means that at some point the Bank of England will have to start to think more about the appropriate level of interest rates rather than the pace of …
China’s EV push a major threat The 2.6% m/m drop in industrial production in October was the second consecutive fall. And while motor vehicle output rebounded from the plunge in September, it was still 16% below its 2019 level. Firms are still pinning …
Research from the Bank of Canada suggests that half of all variable-rate, fixed-payment mortgage holders have now hit their so-called trigger rates, which means their payments will rise. This is one factor weighing on spending, with retail sales volumes …
25th November 2022
Foreign visitor numbers jump but services struggle Japan received 461,000 foreign visitors in October (seasonally adjusted), almost double the September figure. This is helping businesses in accommodation and transport, which media reports say are …
The most eye-catching statistic published this week was the net migration into the UK of 504,000 people in the year to June 2022. That’s a record high. It continued the recent trend of net inflows from the non-EU and net outflows to the EU. And it …
Despite the resilience evident in the latest round of hard data, our recession tracker models suggest the odds of a downturn next year are still rising. Odds of recession rising Our recession tracker indicators all but guarantee the economy will contract …
23rd November 2022
As the dust settles on this week’s Autumn Statement, we take a step back and answer three key questions. (Clients can catch up on our detailed analysis and our Drop In webinar following Thursday’s fiscal event here and here .) With the economy entering …
18th November 2022
Although the data this week showed renewed rises in the annual rates of CPI-trim and CPI-median inflation in October, our calculations show that the timelier 3-month annualised measures both declined. That could persuade the Bank of Canada to drop down …
Media blaming weak yen and virus for Q3 GDP fall The economy shrank by 0.3% q/q in Q3 due to a surge in real imports, as well as disappointing private consumption and investment growth. Some media outlets have blamed the weak yen and COVID for the …
The big fiscal tightening set to be unveiled at the Autumn Statement on 17 th November is coming at a time when the economy is probably already in recession. And the fiscal consolidation, rumoured to be worth a total of £54bn (1.9% of GDP), could risk …
11th November 2022
Consumption resilient against Q3 virus wave The seventh COVID wave in Q3 has been the worst on record so far in terms of daily infections. Yet the Cabinet Office’s monthly estimate of private consumption for July and August was 0.6% above the Q2 average …
The modest fiscal loosening unveiled in the Fall Economic Statement this week is unlikely to move the needle much for monetary policy, but the surge in employment in October and the acceleration in wage growth nevertheless leave the Bank of Canada’s …
4th November 2022
The reports that the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, will unveil in his Autumn Statement on 17 th November a fiscal tightening of up to £50bn by 2026/27 (1.7% of GDP) suggest that after a period in which fiscal policy has provided the economy with support, it is …
28th October 2022
The 2.6% annualised rise in third quarter GDP was a lot worse than it looked, with growth in underlying demand grinding to a near-halt. At the same time, there are mounting signs that economic weakness will soon feed through to disinflation in core …
MoF likely intervened again We revised up our inflation forecasts last week to reflect the further weakening of the yen to 150 against the dollar last week. As it happens, the yen jumped from a low-point of 152 against the dollar to 146 late on Friday, …
This week’s data releases painted a mixed picture of activity: from the good, to the bad, and the just plain ugly. Manufacturing sector holding up well First the good; manufacturing output increased by 0.4% m/m in September, following decent monthly gains …
21st October 2022
German economy overtakes Japan’s With the yen weakening to 150 against the dollar this week, we estimate that Germany has overtaken Japan as the world’s third largest economy in dollar terms. (See Chart 1.) Chart 1: Nominal GDP (US$bn, 4Q Sum) Sources: …
Minutes signal RBA not done yet The RBA this week signalled that even though it slowed the pace of tightening at its last meeting, it is not done yet. In a speech on Wednesday, Deputy Governor Bullock showed that the higher frequency of the RBA’s policy …
GPIF could shift back to domestic assets The release of stronger-than-expected US inflation figures on Tuesday contributed to a further rise in US long-term interest rates. They are now the highest they’ve been since mid-June. With the Bank of Japan …
16th September 2022
Nuclear restarts still in the balance The timely Tokyo CPI showed that inflation jumped from 2.5% to 2.9% in August. That was partly due to the fading drag from last year’s mobile phone tariff cuts, but another key driver was the 29% y/y surge in …
26th August 2022
Productivity growth slowing further The 0.5% q/q rise in Japan’s Q2 GDP brought output closer to its pre-virus peak, with productivity up by 0.4% y/y. However, the bigger picture is that the pandemic has further slowed the sluggish productivity gains …
19th August 2022