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The April employment report showed that while jobs growth remains solid enough, it is still trending lower and the surveys suggest activity growth is slowing too. With ongoing concerns over regional banks looking more likely to result in a further …
5th May 2023
April strength offset by downward revisions to earlier months The 253,000 gain in non-farm payrolls in April suggests that the labour market remains resilient despite the banking sector turmoil and broader signs of an economic slowdown. That said, the …
Pound standing to attention for King’s Coronation Note: We’ll be discussing the Bank of England’s May decision in an online briefing at 10:00 EDT/15:00 BST on Thursday, 11 th May . Register Now . The Coronation of King Charles III means the UK is on show …
Labour market conditions easing despite unchanged unemployment rate The decline in full-time positions in April means that the large rise in total employment was weaker than it looks. Hours worked only crept up during the LFS reference week and, given the …
Labour market resilient, but small cracks emerging The decline in full-time positions in April means that the large rise in total employment was weaker than it looks. Hours worked only crept up during the LFS reference week and, given the public sector …
April strength offset by downward revisions to earlier months The 253,000 gain in non-farm payrolls in April suggests that the labour market remains resilient despite the banking sector turmoil and broader signs of an economic slowdown. Nevertheless, that …
Hard data released this week paint a more downbeat picture of the euro-zone economy than the latest surveys. Three points are worth highlighting. First, the data confirm that the 0.1% q/q rise in euro-zone GDP in Q1 masks a greater weakness in domestic …
Wage pressures bubbling up Data released earlier in the week showed that pay increases under newly-inked enterprise bargaining agreements (EBAs) have started to surge in Australia. Employees covered by new EBAs received an annualised pay hike of 3.0% in …
Pay at small firms not keeping up with large firms While wage growth has been very strong by historical standards in recent months, wages have risen faster for employees of larger firms than at smaller firms. (See Chart 1.) Chart 1: Labour Cash Earnings …
Will 4.50% be the peak? Markets and economists have come round to our view that rates will rise to 4.50% 4.50% may well be the peak Risk is that resilient economy and sticky inflation prompt rise to 4.75% or 5.00% With the financial markets and other …
4th May 2023
Today’s 25bp decision was in line with market expectations and the views of most forecasters polled by Reuters – though we had been in the minority forecasting 50bp. The move marks a slowing in the pace of policy tightening and suggests at face value that …
While food CPI inflation remains very high in all major advanced economies – and especially so in Europe – we expect it to fall sharply in the coming year. Energy and labour costs have been key in keeping consumer food inflation so high, but these props …
We’ve been surprised that the rise in Bank Rate from 0.10% in November 2021 to 4.25% hasn’t triggered a contraction in GDP at the start of this year. Indeed, while higher interest rates were a further drag on net mortgage lending in March, the …
Strength of exports and unit labour cost growth unlikely to last A rebound in exports drove a sharp narrowing of the international trade deficit to a four-month low of $64.2bn in March, from $70.6bn in February, but the surveys continue to suggest that …
Downside risks to first-quarter GDP growth despite export outperformance The small rise in export volumes and slump in imports in March confirms that net trade improved last quarter. However, the weakness of imports means there is a risk that the …
Downside risks to Q1 GDP growth The small rise in export volumes and slump in import volumes in March confirms that net trade boosted GDP growth last quarter. However, as lower imports are likely to be reflected in slower inventory building – which the …
Strength of exports and unit labour cost growth unlikely to last The sharp fall in the international trade deficit to $64.2bn in March, from $70.6bn in February, was driven by a rebound in exports, but the surveys continue to suggest that renewed declines …
Decline in bank deposits doesn’t look like a bank run March’s money and credit data showed that the collapse of the US bank SVB and the takeover of Credit Suisse in early March triggered a small withdrawal of funds from the overall UK banking system. …
Net lending stable as investors wait for the bottom Even as commercial property investment has collapsed, net lending to property has been stable at close to zero since the start of the year. That suggests investors are building up war chests to snap up …
Recovery unlikely to continue The rise in mortgage approvals in March was stronger than consensus expectations, reflecting the reversal of the spike in mortgage rates since the autumn. However, we don’t think that mortgage rates can fall any further …
The market has finally come round to our long-standing view that Bank Rate will rise to 4.5%, with the Bank of England to likely to deliver another 25 basis point hike when it meets on 11 th May. But what will follow? Resilient activity data and …
The slowdown in regular earnings at the start of the year largely reflects sampling changes, with an unchanged sample of firms reporting continued strong wage growth. However, with inflation set to come off the boil before long and the labour market …
Net exports won’t have boosted GDP in Q1 The widening of the trade surplus in recent months belies the negligible contribution that net exports will have made to Q1 GDP. Indeed, we think the weakness in import values last quarter primary reflected …
Net exports won’t have boosted GDP in Q1 The wide trade surplus belies the negligible contribution made by net exports to Q1 GDP. The widening of the trade surplus to $15.3bn in March, from an upwards-revised $14.2bn in February, was in contrast to what …
The Fed’s new policy statement provides the clearest hint yet that the 25bp rate hike today is likely to be the last. We expect economic weakness and a sharper-than-expected drop back in core inflation to convince officials to start cutting rates again …
3rd May 2023
Fed’s focus will turn to policy loosening before long The Fed’s new policy statement provides the clearest hint yet that the 25bp rate hike today is likely to be the last. We expect economic weakness and a sharper-than-expected drop back in core inflation …
We expect a final 25bp rate hike from the Fed today, to 5.00-5.25%... (19.00 BST) ...and a 50bp hike from the ECB tomorrow, to 3.50% (13.15 BST) The US trade deficit probably narrowed sharply in March (13.30 BST) Key Market Themes The FOMC looks set to …
A bipartisan deal to raise the debt ceiling alongside modest cuts to government spending still appears to be the most likely way out of the current impasse. It's possible that moderate Republicans will step in to help the Democrats push through a …
Although the unemployment rate remains near a record low, the decline in vacancies suggests that labour market conditions have nevertheless eased, supporting our view that wage growth is close to a peak. While the unemployment rate has been unchanged at …
ISM suggests activity weak in second quarter The slight rebound in the ISM services index to 51.9 in April from 51.2 in March was broadly in line with the small gain in the ISM manufacturing index. Nevertheless, that still leaves the composite index at a …
A combination of the falls in global agricultural commodity prices, energy prices and wage growth will soon drag down food CPI inflation from a 46-year high of 19.6% in March perhaps to around 4.5% by the end of the year. Food inflation will soon become a …
ADP surge another sign that in April the sweetest showers fall The ADP report – suggesting that private sector employment increased by a stronger 296,000 in April, more than double the 142,000 gain the month before – is another signal that the economy …
Demand in line with post-GFC lows The slight rise in mortgage applications in April left them little changed from their recent lows, pointing to further near-term weakness in sales. While we expect affordability will gradually improve, growing economic …
Berlin offices have been outperforming those in other German markets for some time. But Q1 data suggest that growth has begun to falter, and we think that the recent strength of the market won’t last. Berlin office rents have risen rapidly over …
Weakness in consumption growth While retail sales values rose at a decent pace in March, we estimate that sales volumes fell the most since 2021’s lockdowns last quarter and that weakness has further to run. That in turn should prevent the Reserve Bank of …
Weakness in consumption growth will deter RBA from further rate hikes While retail sales values rose at a decent pace in March, we estimate that sales volumes fell the most since 2021’s lockdowns last quarter and that weakness has further to run. The 0.4% …
Labour market continues to run red hot New Zealand’s labour market remained extremely tight last quarter, presenting upside risks to our forecast for a 25bp rate hike later this month. The 0.8% q/q rise in employment was stronger than most had …
Tight labour market raises the risk of outsized RBNZ hike The strength of New Zealand’s labour market last quarter poses upside risks to our view that the RBNZ will lift rates by 25bp later this month. The 0.8% q/q rise in employment in Q1 was stronger …
The decline in job openings to a near two-year low of 9.6 million in March, from a peak of 12.1 million a year earlier, suggests that, even without a rise in the unemployment rate, labour market conditions are nevertheless easing and are consistent with a …
2nd May 2023
House price falls pause in April The pause in house price falls in April suggested that the reversal of the autumn spike in mortgage rates has allowed prices to stabilise. But with affordability still very stretched by historical standards and the economy …
The Reserve Bank of Australia retained its tightening bias when it lifted the cash rate by 25bp at today’s meeting, but we suspect that it won’t raise interest rates any further over the coming months . The Bank’s decision to lift the cash rate from 3.60% …
Tightening cycle over but rates will only be lowered in Q2 2024 The Reserve Bank of Australia retained its tightening bias when it lifted the cash rate by 25bp at today’s meeting, but we suspect that it won’t raise interest rates any further over the …
Japan’s large corporate sector surpluses are a key source of deflationary pressure. Corporate savings surged in the 1990s, primarily because net interest payments slumped, and have since remained stubbornly high. Unfortunately, workers have benefited …
House price rebound will prove fleeting The ongoing rebound in house prices is living on borrowed time. With affordability extremely stretched and the economy poised for a sharp downturn, we’re sticking to our forecast that house prices will fall another …
The collapse of First Republic Bank is no big surprise – it had been teetering on the edge since suffering $100bn in deposit withdrawals mostly in March – but it’s a timely reminder that banking turmoil will continue to flare up periodically. After …
1st May 2023
Manufacturing outlook weak, but hi-tech revival boosting construction The trivial rebound in the ISM manufacturing index to a still depressed 47.1 in April, from 46.3, contrasts with the more substantial recovery in the alternative S&P Global PMI but …
We expect the Fed to deliver a final 25bp hike… (Wed.) …while the ECB will probably raise the deposit rate by 50bp (Thu.) We think US non-farm payrolls rose by a softer 180,000 in April (Fri.) Key Market Themes With Yield Curve Control (YCC) set to stay …
28th April 2023
Although underlying activity growth rebounded in the first quarter, while wage and price inflation remained too high, we expect the second quarter to bring a sharper slowdown across the board. GDP data show weaker start to year The first-quarter GDP …