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We think French wage inflation will remain much stronger than in the pre-pandemic period this year. This is not least because of the automatic adjustments to inflation of the minimum wage and negotiated wages engrained in the French system. Charts 1 …
16th February 2023
The survey data suggest that the modest decline in mortgage rates since October falls a long way short of what would be required for house prices to bottom out. The fall in market interest rates since the “mini” budget has allowed the average quoted …
Exports downturn well under way The trade deficit was virtually unchanged in January, as volumes and prices of exports and imports fell across the board. With the global downturn weighing on external demand, further export volume contractions are in …
Labour market will continue to slacken The weakness in January’s labour market data shows that rapid rate hikes are starting to cool activity, but with inflation still far too high that won’t prevent the RBA from tightening policy for a while yet. The …
Labour market will continue to loosen The weakness in January’s labour market data underlines that aggressive monetary tightening is starting to cool activity, but with inflation still far too high, that won’t prevent the RBA from hiking interest rates …
Exports and machinery orders to trend down in H1 The trade deficit was virtually unchanged in January, as volumes and prices of exports and imports fell across the board. Export volumes likely fell for the second consecutive month and with the global …
Commercial crude oil stocks looking healthy Commercial crude stocks rose to their highest since June 2021 last week due to lower refinery activity. With crude demand likely to remain sluggish over the coming months, and the US government set to sell …
15th February 2023
Unseasonably warm weather provides little support The unseasonably warm start to 2023 provided little support to the housing market or construction, with sales and prices falling further in January while housing starts slumped to a 28-month low. As prices …
We expect the central bank in the Philippines to raise rates by 50bps to 6%... (07.00 GMT) … and Bank Indonesia to keep rates unchanged at 5.75% (07.20 GMT) US January housing starts may temper economic optimism a bit (13.30 GMT) Key Market Themes This …
Further evidence of rebound The 1.0% m/m rebound in manufacturing output in January provides further evidence that the economy began the year on a strong footing. That said, while the survey evidence also appears to be turning a corner, for now it is …
Surge in sales erases Q1 recession fears The massive 3.0% m/m surge in retail sales in January may have been partly related to the unseasonably mild winter in the Northeast but, alongside the unexpected strength of payroll employment, it nevertheless …
Further evidence of January rebound The solid 1.0% m/m rebound in manufacturing output in January provides further evidence that the economy began the year on a strong footing. That said, while the survey evidence also appears to be turning a corner, for …
Sales volumes fall again despite resurgent motor vehicle sector Another rise in motor vehicle manufacturing sales failed to offset weakness elsewhere in December, with overall sales volumes edging down. The rebound in the S&P Manufacturing PMI and …
Moderating services inflation makes Bank of England’s life easier The fall in CPI inflation from 10.5% in December to 10.1% in January (consensus and CE forecast: 10.2%, BoE forecast: 10.1%), the drop in the core rate from 6.3% to 5.8% and the easing in …
Moderating services inflation makes Bank of England’s life easier The sharp fall in CPI inflation from 10.5% in December to 10.1% in January (consensus and CE forecast: 10.2%) was the most eye-catching part of today’s CPI release. But it is the easing in …
The government formally nominated Kazuo Ueda as the next Bank of Japan Governor at yesterday’s Diet session. Since the initial announcement of his candidature last Friday , analysts and investors have been looking for clarity on Mr Ueda’s views. So far …
Data a touch softer than expected, but not soft enough for RBNZ to back away We still expect rates to peak at 5.5% by the middle of this year Looming recession will prompt looser policy by year-end The incoming data have been a touch softer than the RBNZ …
A further decline in US inflation seems largely priced in to financial markets. But we still think investors are too optimistic about how quickly the economy will grow, and as such are sticking with our view that equities will come under renewed pressure, …
14th February 2023
The surge in employment in January highlights that some sectors are still recovering strongly and raises the prospect that the economy could avoid recession, although we still judge that a modest one is more likely than not. As the employment gains have …
We think the PBOC will cut the interest rate on its Medium-Term Lending Facility UK CPI inflation probably fell further in January (07.00 GMT) We expect US activity data to show some recovery, due partly to easing supply shortages Key Market Themes …
Pace of disinflation slowing The 0.5% m/m increase in consumer prices in January suggests that the downward trend in inflation is slowing. But we still expect the disinflationary process to re-accelerate soon, as easing shortages push core goods prices …
Core inflation eases only gradually The 0.5% m/m increase in consumer prices in January illustrates that inflation is still declining only gradually, but we still expect that downward trend to accelerate soon, as easing goods shortages feed through and …
Recession looming Confirmation that euro-zone GDP growth slowed to a crawl in Q4 does not alter our view that the region is now falling into recession. That said, we think the labour market will continue to hold up well. The second estimate of Q4 GDP …
Wage growth continues to accelerate despite cooling labour demand December’s labour market data showed that, despite an easing in labour demand, labour market conditions stayed tight and the market continued to support strong wage growth. The Bank of …
Wage growth continues to accelerate despite cooling labour demand December’s labour market data showed that, despite an easing in labour demand, labour market conditions stayed tight and the market continues to support strong wage growth. The Bank of …
Still on track for a recession in the first half Japan’s economy returned to growth in Q4, avoiding a technical recession after the contraction in Q3. With business investment slowing even quicker than we anticipated and a lower savings rate leaving less …
Weak investment momentum makes recession even likelier Japan’s economy returned to growth in Q4, avoiding a technical recession after the contraction in Q3. However, the rebound was subdued, let down mostly by contractions in business investment and …
Slowdown in lending activity beginning to show in January The expected slowdown in net lending to real estate began to show in January. This was seen across all sectors and the latest Senior Loan Officer (SLO) survey suggested this will continue, as banks …
13th February 2023
Central banks need wage growth to slow significantly before they can judge that inflation is firmly under control. The least painful way for this to happen is for the recent rise in “mismatch” between workers and vacancies to reverse. However, we think …
The surge in employment and rise in hours worked in January suggest that economic activity continued to expand at the start of 2023 and present clear upside risks to our forecasts for GDP growth. Nevertheless, we disagree with the market-implied view …
10th February 2023
The US dollar is set to end the week a touch stronger against most currencies, adding to its gains last week. But, aside from the Japanese yen round-tripping on news over the next BoJ governor, it’s been a relatively quiet week for the greenback – not …
It was a fairly quiet week in commodities markets, although oil prices rose on concerns about earthquake-related disruption to exports from the Turkish port of Ceyhan and Russia’s announcement of a 0.5m bpd cut to production in March. By contrast, the …
Given that US economic outperformance has tended to coincide with a stronger dollar, we suspect a “soft landing” in the US economy would provide a favourable backdrop for the greenback, if it also meant that growth in the US remained more resilient than …
Markets have continued to swing round to the Fed’s view that rate cuts are unlikely this year. We still believe that those cuts are coming, however, as economic growth disappoints and core inflation falls more rapidly than the Fed is expecting. Markets …
Overview – Housing market activity is likely to recover only gradually from its current lows, which means we think 2023 will be the weakest year for sales since 2012. Affordability will remain stretched by past standards, especially in the first half of …
Confidence still near historic lows, despite recent rebound The further modest rise in the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index in early February still only left it in line with its average level during the depths of the financial crisis in …
Almost three years on from the pandemic, only middle-income households are yet to recover financially. In the face of a looming downturn, we expect this will drive growth for discounters as middle-income households trade down their spending habits, …
It doesn’t really matter if the economy was in recession last year or not (although according to the technical definition it was not). (See here .) Two other factors are more important. First, recession or no recession, the economy is weak. Real GDP …
The main development of the week happened in the past few hours: the reported nomination of Kazuo Ueda as the next BoJ Governor. Our initial response is here . While analysts and investors are looking for clarity on Mr Ueda’s views, there is little to …
The nomination of Kazuo Ueda to lead the Bank of Japan could be read as a sign that the Kishida government is seeking a shift away from ultra-loose policy, but we aren’t fully convinced that this is the case. According to media reports, Japan’s government …
Recession may come this year as resilience recedes The economy escaped a recession in 2022 by the skin of its teeth (£77m to be precise). But with the full drags from high inflation and high interest rates yet to be felt, we think there will be a …
Avoiding a recession in 2023 will prove harder The 0.5% m/m fall in real GDP in December was worse than expected (consensus -0.3%), but the 0.0% change in Q4 (consensus 0.0%, BoE +0.1%) meant that the economy avoided a recession last year by the skin of …
With trimmed mean inflation surpassing the Bank’s November forecast in Q4, the RBA turned more hawkish when it lifted the cash rate by 25bp on Tuesday. Today’s Statement on Monetary Policy shows that the Bank expects inflation to only touch the top end of …
We doubt the recent renewed outperformance of the “big-tech” sectors of the US stock market will continue in the coming months given the prospect of a mild recession, even if TIPS yields fall again. Despite some disappointing news on the earnings front, …
9th February 2023
We expect stretched affordability and rising unemployment to lead to an increase in rental arrears and evictions in the coming quarters, causing rental household formation to turn negative and apartment demand to soften. We have argued since mid-2022 that …
We anticipate interest rate hikes in Mexico and Peru… (Thu.) … but think Russia’s central bank will leave rates on hold (Fri.) UK GDP data likely to show that the economy avoided a recession in 2022 (Fri.) Key Market Themes Shrinking central bank …