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It’s debatable whether the 0.1% q/q and 0.3% q/q contractions in real GDP in Q3 and Q4 2023 should be labelled as a recession given the falls were so small. While it satisfies the usual definition of a recession being two consecutive quarters of falling …
16th February 2024
Services inflation will slow sharply Australian labour market data published yesterday garnered considerable attention, largely because they showed that the unemployment rate overshot analyst expectations and jumped to a two-year high of 4.1%. However, we …
Japan’s economy is not in recession The preliminary estimate of Q4 GDP showed the second consecutive contraction in output, but we doubt it will scupper the BoJ’s plans to end negative interest rates. For a start, the quality of Japan’s preliminary GDP …
The strength of the labour market in January is another reason to think that the Bank of Canada can wait a little longer before it starts to cut interest rates. Bank’s latest communications give little away Governor Tiff Macklem gave little away in his …
9th February 2024
Bond vigilante fiddle, as budget burns Budget on an unsustainable path The CBO released new budget projections this week showing the Federal deficit falling only slightly from 6.2% of GDP in fiscal year 2023, to 5.3% in 2024. The deficit is then expected …
A lot of data is being released next week and it might not be a good look for the UK economy. The release of January’s CPI inflation figures on Wednesday may reveal a second rise in as many months, from 4.0% in December to 4.1%. Within that, both core and …
RBA’s hawkish bias will be put to the test While the RBA’s decision to leave rates on hold on Tuesday didn’t surprise anyone, the Bank’s Monetary Policy Statement did raise a few eyebrows. In contrast to a number of its developed-market counterparts, the …
External demand strong, domestic demand weak The Q4 GDP data due next week are likely to show that the economy staged a partial rebound after the sharp contraction in Q3. But the details will probably confirm that domestic demand remained weak. Indeed, we …
8th February 2024
First rate cut delayed until May Based on the steer provided by Fed Chair Jerome Powell halfway through this week’s press conference, we now expect the first Fed rate cut to come at the early-May FOMC meeting rather than in mid-March, with the Fed cutting …
2nd February 2024
The upside surprise to fourth-quarter GDP should, somewhat counterintuitively, make the Bank of Canada more confident that inflation is heading back to 2% because it implies that productivity has rebounded. Nonetheless, with the Federal Reserve pushing …
The Bank of England caused a lot of waves in the media and some ripples in the markets this week. But it hasn’t altered our thinking that lower inflation than the Bank of England expects will mean rates are cut from 5.25% to 5.00% in June and all the way …
Kishida pushing for wage increases PM Kishida pledged on Tuesday that the government will “take all possible steps” to raise real incomes this year. While he mentioned no new measures, his government recently rolled out tax breaks for firms that offer …
RBA will soon be gearing up for rate cuts… CPI data released this week bolstered our conviction that the Reserve Bank of Australia will loosen policy in Q2, rather than in Q4 as the analyst consensus is predicting. For one thing, both headline and trimmed …
It is hard to say which is more remarkable: that GDP growth accelerated last year following the Fed’s most aggressive tightening campaign in decades, or that core inflation nevertheless fell back to the 2% target in annualised terms over the second half …
26th January 2024
The outlook for monetary policy all depends on whether the Bank of Canada is willing to act based on where it thinks shelter inflation is heading, rather than its current rate. The Bank’s communications suggest it is starting to move in that direction, …
In last week’s UK Economics Weekly we highlighted the lingering upside risks to inflation, which were emphasised in this week’s release of January’s flash PMIs. (See here .) But this week, we need to talk about the risk of deflation. We’ve been …
Tokyo inflation won’t remain below 2% for long At its meeting on Tuesday, the Bank of Japan sounded increasingly confident that it will be able to meet its 2% inflation target on a sustained basis. And the minutes of the Bank’s December meeting released …
Much ado about nothing The headlines this week were dominated entirely by the Australian government’s decision to redesign the Stage 3 income tax cuts that are due to take effect on July 1 st . The long and short of it is that the government wants to …
We argued last week that there was little to support the idea that the “last mile” of getting inflation back to 2% will somehow be the hardest. But new data on rent inflation released this week raise the possibility that the disinflationary process won’t …
19th January 2024
There was little for the Bank of Canada to be encouraged by this week, with evidence of a further deterioration in the economy yet little sign of a fall in inflation expectations or downward pressure on core inflation. That puts the Bank in a tricky …
This week’s data releases called into question our forecast that the UK economy will experience a soft landing, by which we mean inflation falling back to the 2.0% target without a big contraction in GDP. Could cigarettes and containers ignite the CPI? …
Disinflation unlikely to stall Earlier this week, we learnt that new dwellings commencements continued in a tailspin, with housing starts falling to a 11-year low of 37,000 in Q3. That led some commentators to sound the alarm on how the resulting …
Note: Join us on our upcoming Asia Drop-in on 25th January. We’re discussing China’s missing stimulus, the Asian monetary policy outlook and much more. Register here for the 20-minute online briefing. Inflationary pressures moderating Inflation fell to an …
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, …
12th January 2024
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 …
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 …
Fed still coy about QT end-game FOMC minutes put focus on inflation data The minutes of the mid-December FOMC meeting did not dissuade us that the Fed will start to cut interest rates from this March onwards. Admittedly, officials warned that “they would …
5th January 2024
Conditions in the housing market seem to be improving, with the local real estate board data pointing to a big improvement in the home sales-to-new listing ratio in December. While the unseasonably warm weather may have played a role and house prices …
There are still plenty of downside risks to our below-consensus forecast that the economy will stagnate in 2024 with GDP growth of 0.0%. (See here .) But the news over the past week has highlighted three upsides. First, the slide in 2-year and 5-year …
Manufacturers keep losing market share overseas Just as we predicted a few months ago, the outperformance of Japan’s stock market relative to US stocks has unwound as the yen has strengthened in recent weeks. (See Chart 1.) Chart 1: Yen/Dollar vs. …
A cooling economy will give the RBA cover Earlier this week, the Australian Financial Review published its quarterly survey of economists. By and large, the perception amongst forecasters seems to be that the RBA will retain its hawkish bias for the …
Data this week showed that the population jumped by 430,000 in the third quarter alone, almost as much as the official full-year permanent resident target of 465,000. Nonetheless, the November CPI data showed a much-needed slowdown in rent inflation, …
22nd December 2023
This week saw a renewed attempt from some Fed officials to push back against market expectations for interest rate cuts but, with core PCE inflation running at an annualised pace of below 2% over the past six months, this final flurry of hawkishness isn’t …
Revised data showing that real GDP contracted by 0.1% in Q3 has fuelled the debate as to whether the UK entered a technical recession over the second half of this year. But focussing on small falls (or increases) in GDP misses the point: the bigger …
Wage growth poised to lose momentum Earlier this week, we found out that Westpac’s leading index edged up once again in November and is consistent with a pickup in economic growth over the next six months. That raises the risk that labour demand will be …
Policy rate hike in January now looking unlikely It came as a surprise to no one that the Bank of Japan left policy settings unchanged at this week’s meeting . Even so, yields on 10-year JGBs plunged by nearly 10bp since then, whereas 10-year Treasury …
Household net worth fell in the third quarter, although the recent resurgence in bond and equity prices means that should soon be reversed. It is too soon to sound the all-clear for households’ finances, however, given that the debt service ratio is set …
15th December 2023
Fed & markets catching up with inflation reality The Fed’s embrace of interest rate cuts next year is understandable when the latest data suggest that core PCE inflation is rapidly closing in on the 2% target. The plunge in expectations in the aftermath …
If the main objective this week of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) was to keep interest rates unchanged at 5.25% and avoid fuelling even more bets on rate cuts, then it looks like a case of mission accomplished. Even so, the Bank’s …
“Big Australia” isn’t going anywhere We found out yesterday that population growth in Australia hit a record high of 2.4% y/y in Q2, as the post-pandemic boom in net overseas migration continued apace. (See Chart 1.) Moreover, we estimate that, allowing …
Services sector running red-hot The strong Q4 Tankan released this week adds to the case for the Bank of Japan to abandon ultra-loose monetary policy. Of particular importance is that the Tankan shows mounting signs of overheating in the services …
Markets call the Fed’s bluff on higher for longer Markets abandon higher for longer The Fed may not be quite ready to abandon its tightening bias at this week’s FOMC meeting, but the markets are no longer buying its “higher for longer” mantra. Markets …
8th December 2023
The Bank of Canada this week reiterated that strong immigration is putting upward pressure on inflation because housing supply is failing to keep up. Yet the Bank surely can’t be oblivious to the negative impact of high interest rates on construction. …
The further drop in UK market interest rate expectations this week means that investors now think the first interest rate cut will happen in June next year instead of August. And investors are now pricing in an 80% chance of a cut by May. That has led to …
Services inflation continues to accelerate The economic data released this week seem to vindicate the Bank of Japan’s caution when it comes to abandoning ultra-loose monetary policy. For a start, the timely Tokyo CPI showed that inflation slowed from …
Not higher, not longer Earlier today, the Treasury and the RBA published an updated Statement on the Conduct of Monetary Policy. The revised statement clarified that the RBA’s objective is to return inflation to the mid-point of its 2-3% target. That led …
Despite strong growth, core inflation normalising Q3 growth up, Q4 down This week’s modest upward revision to third-quarter GDP growth, which is now estimated to have been as strong as 5.2% annualised, rather than 4.9%, was certainly eye-catching. It …
1st December 2023
The revisions to the national accounts leave the post-pandemic recovery looking stronger than we thought. But that is partly due to intense inventory building, which leaves the economy vulnerable to a period of destocking now that demand is weakening. …