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GDP to fall as inflation rises Data for Q1 published this week showed that the euro-zone eked out a 0.2% q/q expansion at the start of the year. However with economic conditions having worsened recently we think that GDP will post a small contraction in …
29th April 2022
Stefan Ingves would struggle to keep a secret Much of the analysis following the start of repo rate hikes by the Riksbank yesterday has pushed a narrative that the Bank’s messaging was more hawkish than expected and its decision to raise rates as a …
We understand why our new forecast that interest rates will be raised from 0.75% now to a peak to 3.00% next year has generated a lot of interest among clients. After all, it assumes that rates will peak higher than investors (2.50%) and other analysts …
Russia: crisis easing, but challenges await Comments from Elvira Nabiullina this week during her appearance in the State Duma to be reappointed as CBR governor for another five-year term underline the view that the most acute phase of Russia’s economic …
22nd April 2022
The news on the economy was distinctly downbeat this week with evidence of a consumer slowdown mounting (see here and here ) and the IMF predicting that the UK economy will grow by just 1.2% in 2023, the slowest among G7 countries. But that did not stop …
We first said in late March that we thought the ECB was likely to raise rates as soon as July. This was because inflation had been higher than expected for several months in succession and we thought it would continue to surprise on the upside, while the …
Boom time for Salmon prices In an otherwise extremely quiet week for tier-1 macroeconomic data releases, the publication of weekly salmon price data from Statistics Norway stood out. In short, it’s boom time for the fishing industry. The export price of …
ECB President Christine Lagarde suggested at today’s post-meeting press conference that the Bank would be sticking to its plans for policy normalisation, despite inflation surprising to the upside since the last meeting. She highlighted the hit to …
14th April 2022
Price pressures building This week brought March inflation releases from Norway, Denmark and Sweden. Norway’s inflation data were a little weaker than expected, with the headline rate at 4.5% and the core rate unchanged at 2.1%. (See here .) Those …
If Chancellor Rishi Sunak was hoping that the economy would provide some respite from the political hot waters that he’s found himself in recently then data released over the past week will have come as another blow. First came figures released on Monday …
Fiscal support may not prevent Q2 contraction Governments stepped up policy support this week to protect against the surging cost of living and, while the measures should help to shield households and firms from surging inflation, we don’t think they will …
The government’s new energy strategy, revealed earlier this week, will do little to reduce the current upward pressure on inflation. The strategy commits to generating 95% of electricity from ‘low carbon’ sources by 2030, with additional targets to ramp …
8th April 2022
Russia hit with new energy sanctions This week’s announcement that the EU will ban the import of Russian coal from mid-August will not have a major impact on Russian export revenues, but it marks a clear shift in the EU’s aim to target Russia’s energy …
The latest surveys suggest that the euro-zone economy was still growing at a decent pace in March but that firms, consumers and investors expect much worse to come. Table 1 shows some of the timeliest survey indicators immediately before the euro-zone’s …
Hopes of a peace deal fall flat Optimism about the prospect of an end to the war in Ukraine came and went this week. Hopes were raised after negotiators met in Istanbul on Tuesday and Russia said that it would significantly pare back military operations …
1st April 2022
Another month, another inflation surprise With euro-zone inflation having jumped to 7.5% in March (see here ) it seems increasingly likely that the ECB will accelerate its plans to tighten monetary policy. We now think it will end net asset purchases in …
Shifting goalposts for Nationalbank and SNB The fact that we now expect the ECB to hike interest rates sooner and faster than we previously anticipated naturally affects our outlooks for policy in Switzerland and the Nordics. Note that we now forecast the …
The squeeze on real household disposable incomes will hit harder from today. The first day of April brings with it a 54% leap in utilities prices as well as rises in council tax, water prices and many phone contract prices. Government benefits rise too, …
Russia’s financial markets return from the ashes Trading on the Moscow Stock Exchange returned this week, with the central bank allowing trading of sovereign debt from Monday and selected equities from Thursday. Russian markets remain illiquid and there …
25th March 2022
European policymakers remained divided this week on whether to impose more curbs on Russian oil and gas. As we argued here , an EU embargo on Russian oil would be less disruptive than cutting off natural gas. But the EU is determined to reduce its …
Breman vents to a bunch of 16-19 year olds Riksbank Deputy Governor Anna Breman appeared to take out her hawkish frustrations on a group of secondary students in a speech on Wednesday. One can only speculate as to what the pupils made of the talk; while …
This week’s Spring Statement felt more like a piece of political theatre than an exercise in supporting the economy. Rishi Sunak’s determination to be remembered as a tax-cutting Chancellor meant that he made a great fanfare about cutting fuel duty for …
Russia dodges default The saga over whether Russia’s government would make coupon payments on two Eurobonds this week seems to have been settled for the time being. At least some creditors are reported to have received payments (albeit a little late). …
18th March 2022
What’s Swedish for “fundamental change of view”? In a week when the US Fed and the Bank of England both raised interest rates, Riksbank Governor Ingves finally appears to have woken up to the need for tighter policy in Sweden. Mr Ingves reportedly said …
The messages sent by the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England at their policy meetings this week were very different. While the Fed said it intends to raise interest rates from 0.25-0.50% to 2.75-3.00% by the end of 2023 (see here ), after having …
Things can only get better worse? Our economic forecasts are based on a working assumption that there is no diplomatic solution to the war in the next few months, that Russia remains economically isolated and that sanctions are not rolled back. This is …
Russia’s economy is in the early stages of a deep recession and we’ve revised our forecast for GDP to collapse by 12% this year. We’ve also revised our forecasts for Central and Eastern Europe as a result of the war in Ukraine with inflation set to be …
11th March 2022
Franc(ie) goes to Hollywood parity The Swiss franc rose through parity with the euro in the early hours of Monday for the first time on record. However, its foray into uncharted territory was brief, and it has since given up the gains it made in March. It …
The pressure on the Chancellor, Rishi Sunak, to go beyond the £9bn (0.4% of GDP) fiscal package announced in February and shelter households from even higher energy costs in his Spring Statement on 23 rd March has intensified this week. That’s because the …
Yesterday’s ECB announcement was more hawkish than expected, but so far the Bank’s Chief Economist Philip Lane hasn’t published a new blog post to correct the message as he has done a number of times in the past. You can read our response to the decision …
Russian energy embargo to provide fillip to Gulf The news this week that the West will reduce its energy imports from Russia could open the door for some of the Gulf countries to raise oil production output more quickly. This would provide a significant …
10th March 2022
Events in Russia this week have clearly upturned the outlook completely and the growing possibilities of default, a banking crisis and restrictions on energy exports could cause the downturn to spiral. Russia’s financial markets have been in chaos this …
4th March 2022
As the war in Ukraine has escalated, the upside risks to inflation and the downside risks to activity have increased. The oil price has now risen by around 16% since last Wednesday, leaving it about 25% higher than at the start of February. The UK natural …
Finland most exposed to Russian sanctions We have yet to revise down our GDP growth forecasts for Switzerland and the Nordics in response to the sanctions on Russia, but the negative impact of the conflict will be smaller than for the euro-zone. (Note …
The war in Ukraine has intensified this week, and we have continued to write extensively across all our services about the financial and economic implications, all of which can be found here . In last week’s Weekly , we argued the war in Ukraine would …
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 th February will have significant and far-reaching implications for some time to come. The situation on the ground is still in flux and the endgame is simply unknown at this stage. But as we explained in our reaction to …
25th February 2022
The Bank of England has yet to provide any clues to how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Thursday may influence how far and how fast interest rates need to rise. (All our analysis on the conflict is collated on one page of our website. See here .) The …
Back in safe-haven mode Just weeks after hawkish messaging from the ECB helped to weaken the Swiss franc against the euro (see here ), the Russia-Ukraine conflict has put the currency back into full-on safe-haven mode. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the exchange …
By far the biggest news this week has of course been the Ukraine crisis, and we have written extensively about the implications for the global economy, all of which you can find here . In this Weekly , we will bring out a few key points about what it …
Another week of Russia-Ukraine tensions Russia-Ukraine tensions dominated the headlines again this week and financial markets whipsawed on concerns about an imminent invasion and reports of shelling in eastern Ukraine. But an announcement by President …
18th February 2022
This week saw tensions between Russia and Ukraine get close to boiling point. We have written extensively about the economic implications of a further escalation on both our Emerging Europe and Commodities services and all of our research on the topic can …
Earlier this week brought murmurs of a de-escalation in the Russia/Ukraine border crisis. But tensions seem to have flared up again in recent days. We have no particular insight on the likely outcome, but we can offer some thoughts on the economic impact …
Yet another blow to Riksbank’s dovish stance Statistics Sweden made a bid for the most eyebrow-raising data release of the week with the news this morning that core inflation jumped from 1.7% in December to 2.5% in January. (See here .) We, the consensus …
The further surge in US CPI inflation from 7.0% in December to a 40-year high of 7.5% in January and some hawkish comments by US Fed officials have rattled global financial markets this week, with UK markets being caught in the crossfire. And recent …
11th February 2022
Governor Ingves is not for turning We were surely not the only ones to have thought, “What is the Riksbank playing at?”, following the damp squib of its policy announcement on Thursday morning. Recall that the Bank barely changed its dovish messaging, and …
Anybody expecting the ECB to completely undo the hawkish policy shift that Christine Lagarde delivered at last week’s meeting will have been disappointed by this week’s numerous policy statements. Admittedly, Ms Lagarde herself adopted a more balanced …
What came through most clearly in yesterday’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) statement was the signal that the MPC will act to quash rising cost, price and wage expectations. We unpacked the Bank of England’s February meeting, at which it raised interest …
4th February 2022
Weak lira not having the desired trade effect? The latest indicators raise concerns that the boost to Turkey’s competitiveness from a weak lira that the government has been banking on as part of its new growth model may not be having the desired effect. …
“Mr Establishment” gets the job Today’s appointment of Jens Stoltenberg as Governor of the Norges Bank shows that worries of potential political nepotism ultimately fell on deaf ears, and completes the trifecta for top jobs for the ex-PM and Finance …
We said in our Drop-in on Tuesday that there would be a high bar to clear for the ECB to change its plans and raise interest rates this year. Three days later, after some strong inflation data, that bar now seems to have been cleared! January’s inflation …