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The latest polls ahead of Sunday’s second round of French parliamentary elections suggest that the far-right National Rally (RN) will win the most seats but fall well short of an absolute majority. (See Chart 1.) This will make it very difficult to form a …
5th July 2024
Hurricane Beryl puts oil and gas supply in peril While Hurricane Beryl took a tragic and heavy toll on communities and economies in the Caribbean this week, its impact on fossil fuel production in the Gulf of Mexico looks set to be relatively small. …
The US dollar index looks set to end the week broadly unchanged after core PCE came in line with expectations today. Yesterday’s presidential debate in the US also does not seem to have had much impact on the dollar despite the sizable change in election …
28th June 2024
We’re just two days from the first round of the French legislative election. (All of our election coverage can be found here .) Voting closes on Sunday at 8pm Paris time (7pm BST) and polling organisations should release estimated results shortly …
How could the French election result impact CEE? The surprise decision by French President Macron to announce early parliamentary elections (with the first round taking place this Sunday) has led to a period of turbulence in European bond markets. The …
It is striking how calm UK financial markets have been ahead of next week’s general election. As we set out in our UK Markets Chart Pack , while investor concern over the result of the French elections has led to a near-30 basis points (bps) rise in …
Economic soft landing not budging the polls It is striking how little recent economic events have influenced the polls ahead of the general election on 4 th July. This week’s news that CPI inflation fell to 2.0% in May meant that, just as we predicted …
21st June 2024
This week, the European Commission (EC) announced its intention to open “Excessive Deficit Procedures” (EDPs) against five euro-zone countries: France, Italy, Belgium, Slovakia and Malta. The decisions need to be signed off by the European Council, but …
Space for interest rate cuts narrows across CEE The Hungarian central bank’s decision to opt for a smaller 25bp interest rate cut at its meeting this week fits into a broader theme of policymakers in several parts of the EM world moving towards a slower …
The focus in oil markets this week was on the long term with the IEA predicting that oil demand will peak in 2029 while OPEC argued there is no peak in sight. In any case, when the peak occurs is only part of the picture. In its annual oil report, …
14th June 2024
EU announces new tariffs on China The immediate macroeconomic impact of the EU’s new tariffs on EV imports from China announced this week are likely to be fairly small. As we noted here , the EU imported 440,000 EVs (€9bn) from China over the past year. …
Higher levels of housebuilding is a prize that both Labour and the Conservatives seek, evidenced by the identical target of building 300,000 new homes a year published in their manifestos this week. (You can see all of our election analysis here , and …
The focus this week has been on the fallout of the European elections in France because there is a real chance that the parliamentary elections, to be held on 30 th June and 7 th July, will lead to a government led by the far-right Rassemblement National …
This week both the Conservative and Labour Party have been quick to tell us about ‘financial black holes’ in their opponent’s tax and spending plans. But there are two big things neither party is telling us. First, sticking to their fiscal rules means …
7th June 2024
CBRT reserves on the rise The rebound in Turkey’s FX reserves in the past two months, alongside the sharp reduction in the central bank’s FX swap programme, has taken the CBRT’s net FX position into positive territory for the first time in four years. …
Data released this week confirmed that the euro-zone economy is out of recession, but that domestic demand is still quite weak. The second estimate of Q1 GDP showed that the economy expanded by 0.3% q/q. But the breakdown revealed that was fully explained …
Russian tax hikes: important but not large enough The tax hikes announced by the Russian finance ministry this week will help to plug the hole created by the growing military budget, but won’t deliver the scale of fiscal tightening needed to stop the …
31st May 2024
The key event next week will of course be Thursday’s ECB meeting which we have previewed separately in our ECB Watch . In brief, we think the Bank will go ahead and cut its deposit rate from 4.00% to 3.75% but now expect it to leave rates on hold in July …
With both Labour and the Conservatives this week ruling out increases in income tax, national insurance and VAT, it remains difficult to see how cuts to public services can be avoided after the election. (For all our election analyses, see here .) But …
The US puts up trade barriers, will Europe follow? The US announced that it is ratcheting up tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles, lithium-ion batteries, and solar panels. We covered the announcement and its implications across our Climate, Global, …
The dollar looks set to end the week broadly unchanged against most currencies, halting its slide over the past couple of weeks. Bond yields in the US rebounded this week, partly due to the Fed minutes published on Wednesday but have also risen in other …
24th May 2024
Still too early for nominal TRY appreciation The Turkish lira has been surprisingly stable over the past two months and Finance Minister Simsek noted this week that the currency would have actually appreciated had the central bank not been buying dollars …
Natural gas bucks the trend In a week dominated by sharp falls in oil and precious metals prices, the 12% jump in European natural gas prices has been a notable outlier. Although the front-month TTF benchmark price has slipped back in trading today, at …
It’s tempting to think that every bit of economic data released between now and the general election on 4 th July will make a difference to who will be Prime Minister on 5 th July. Inevitably, data releases will be written up as “good” or “bad” for Sunak …
Worrying or reassuring? The wage growth data published this week were not good for the inflation outlook, but they weren’t as bad as they first appeared. As a re-cap, data released by the ECB showed that negotiated wages rose by 4.7% y/y in Q1, slightly …
Putin’s political shake-up and meeting with Xi There were two big developments in Russia this week. The first was the cabinet reshuffle, in which long-serving defence minister Sergei Shoigu was replaced by economist Andrei Belousov. A lot of ink has been …
17th May 2024
We’ll be discussing the outlook for UK inflation and interest rates in a 20-minute online briefing at 9.30am BST on Wednesday 22nd May shortly after the release of April's CPI data. (Register here .) Next Wednesday’s release of April’s CPI inflation data …
The US decision to hike tariffs on Chinese EVs from 25% to 100% and to also raise tariffs on EV batteries, semiconductors and solar panels, raises the question how Europe will respond. Europe is in a different position from the US because imports of these …
With the Bank of England hinting on Thursday that it is close to cutting interest rates and that rates may need to fall further than investors expect, we have become a bit more confident in our view that, due to low inflation, rates will be cut from 5.25% …
10th May 2024
This week brought more evidence that European central banks feel comfortable starting their easing cycles ahead of the Fed. As we had expected, the Riksbank cut its policy rate by 25bp, even after last week’s Fed meeting confirmed that it will take longer …
Battle of the survey data ... ESIs vs the PMIs The two survey measures of activity released out of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) this week appeared to offer quite different insights into the performance of the region’s economies at the start of Q2. …
3rd May 2024
Data released this week showed that euro-zone GDP rose by a stronger-than-expected 0.3% q/q in Q1. And the disinflation process stalled in April, with the headline rate unchanged at 2.4%. (See here.) But GDP was supported by a big rise in construction in …
We’ll be discussing the outlook for Bank of England policy in a 20-minute online briefing at 3pm BST on Thursday 9th May. (Register here .) OECD too downbeat We think the OECD’s new forecast that the UK will grow at a slower rate in 2025 (of 1.0%) than …
Whither central bank green policy? The role of central banks in fighting climate change was amongst the varied subjects touched upon by France President Emmanuel Macron in a sprawling speech earlier this month. In addition to pondering deep rhetorical …
30th April 2024
US aid package a (large) sticking plaster for Ukraine The $61bn US aid package for Ukraine approved this week will provide a much needed boost to Ukraine’s efforts on the battlefield, but the delays that the funding has faced over recent months casts a …
26th April 2024
Recovery in activity won’t stop ECB rate cuts This week brought some more evidence that the euro-zone economy is coming out of recession. The euro-zone Composite PMI rose more than expected in April, to a level consistent with GDP expanding slightly. …
This week the FTSE 100 broke through the 8,000 mark for the first time since its brief three-day flutter in February last year and reached a record high of 8,100. This appears to be justified based on the recent improvement in economic activity. Indeed, …
Tensions increase, but hopes for de-escalation Tensions between Israel and Iran ratcheted up this week as both sides launched military strikes at one another, raising concern about a broader regional conflict. (Read our research here .) Following Iran’s …
19th April 2024
Note: We’ll be discussing the outlook for monetary policy in the euro-zone in a Drop-In on Thursday, 25th April. Register here for the 20-minute online briefing. The financial news this week has been dominated by the potential impact of the Middle …
In the previous Weekly we said “the risks are tilted towards inflation proving sticker and rate cuts happening a bit later”. This week’s global and domestic events have left our forecast that interest rates will first be cut from 5.25% in June and will …
Where the US leads, the UK often follows. So the rebound in the US CPI inflation rate from 3.2% in February to 3.5% in March and the unchanged core CPI inflation rate of 3.8% has spurred fears that the downward trend in UK inflation will soon stall. In …
12th April 2024
Oil price rally a headache for most in EM Europe... The price of brent crude oil continued to hover around $90pb this week, near its highest level in six months, as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East added to fears over oil supply. For most …
The main takeaway from Thursday’s ECB meeting is that a rate cut in June is highly likely. Big upward surprises to inflation and wage growth data, or increases in the ECB’s updated inflation projections, would probably be necessary for officials to hold …
While we learnt this week that inflation in the euro-zone fell a bit more than expected in March, to 2.4%, some commentators pointed out that the monthly increase was quite high, at 0.8%, and was even higher than in February (0.6%). However, most of the …
5th April 2024
Whether you’re a monetarist or not, it’s hard to ignore the big rise in the annual growth rate of M4 money coming out of the pandemic being a harbinger of the surge in CPI inflation. Shortly before CPI inflation surged from 0.3% in November 2020 to a …
Confirmation that France’s budget deficit was much higher last year (5.5%) than assumed in the government’s 2024 budget (4.9%) adds to concerns about Europe’s public finances. Indeed, Germany, France and Italy are all likely to be tightening fiscal policy …
28th March 2024
China is driving the global renewable rollout… It came as no surprise to see China loom large in the International Renewables Energy Agency’s provisional statistics on renewable energy capacity in 2023. As shown in Chart 1, China added more than twice as …
Hungary shifting down the monetary easing gears The post-meeting communications from Hungary’s central bank (MNB), after it slowed its easing cycle on Tuesday , support our view that the pace of rate cuts is set to slow further over the coming months. The …
Everyone knows that one reason why the recession was so small and short is because higher interest rates had a smaller drag on the economy than in the past. But it’s less appreciated that future interest rate cuts may not boost the economy as much either. …
Has Tusk changed the tide in Poland? The 100 day milestone for Poland’s new government is marked today. From an economic perspective, we think there are three key points worth highlighting about how the outlook has and hasn’t changed. First, the release …
22nd March 2024