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Special edition: recession dashboards
The UK: stagnant, but improving?
Recession pressure: 60%
One of the steepest, fastest and most globally synchronized monetary tightening cycles in history has come to an end. (Or so it seems.) Will a global recession be the result?
Compared with the middle of last year, prospects for a recession in Britain seem to be receding.
However, the economy remains in rather morose state, with a prevalence of red and yellow cells in the most recent columns of our dashboard.
(The “heat-mapping” of all figures in these dashboards tracks their deviations from decades of historic data.)
We last calculated a recession pressure indicator in December. As the January indicators trickle in, job growth and business confidence are improving. Some indicators, like housing, are benefiting from a shift from dark red to “pink.”
Germany: danger zone
Recession pressure: 87%
Germany’s economy has suffered for some time from the disruption of its industrial model, which relied on expanding globalization and cheap energy from Russia.
As the trajectory of our recession indicator shows, its economic indicators are getting even worse. On Jan. 30, the national statistics office said {{nofollow}}the economy indeed shrank in the final three months of 2023, though {{nofollow}}revisions mean Germany narrowly avoided a technical recession (two consecutive quarters of contraction).
Most of our dashboard is flashing red, with a measure of cargo shipping the only recent bright spot. New orders, inflation and capacity utilization remain problematic. Data trickling in for January is showing a worsening job market and receding business confidence.
Australia: still lucky
Recession pressure: 43%
Resource-rich Australia is famous for having avoided recession in the 30 years between the early 1990s and the pandemic. Even its {{nofollow}}Covid-19 downturn was less severe than those of its peers in developed markets.
According to our dashboard, the nation looks set to remain the “lucky country” versus the rest of the economies we examined.
While consumer confidence remains weak, optimistic trends in the stock market, a robust labor market and healthy terms of trade for the nation’s critical commodity exports have pushed chances of recession down.
South Korea: a semiconductor bright spot
Recession pressure: 75%
South Korea’s recession pressure level is elevated relative to several Asian peers. The export-driven economy has suffered amid weakness in its key Chinese market. Business confidence and e-commerce indicators have been worsening.
Still, things have improved since early 2023, when our indicator surpassed 90% and a recession seemed certain. The key semiconductor industry is also worth watching; it recently tipped into green on our dashboard.
Japan: rising sun, blue skies
Recession pressure: 50%
Japan’s economy is a global outlier: its central bank is expected to raise rates, and it’s chasing a positive wage-price spiral.
Corporate credit indicators are in good shape, and consumer confidence is improving. New orders and capacity utilization remain relatively weak.
China: a mixed picture
Recession pressure: 64%
China’s dashboard offers a striking contrast of some bright green and more red.
The labor market is improving. And we’ve previously pointed out the nation’s healthy OECD leading indicator, a data point whose components include early-stage production – though that has now weakened for January.
Negative signals are coming from household credit and confidence measures for consumers and small business. And even after a series of crises in the property market, the residential housing price index continues to deteriorate.
Brazil: unexpected growth
Recession pressure: 47%
Returning Brazilian President Lula has had good economic news since he took office. December figures showed the economy unexpectedly grew in the third quarter.
Our recession gauge has steadily receded over the past year, and the dashboard looks a lot like the national soccer jersey lately, showing mostly green and yellow cells for December and January. The OECD leading indicator and manufacturing figures are historically healthy.
Canada: resource pressure, worried consumers
Recession pressure: 82%
The economies of Canada and the US are closely intertwined, but our dashboard has been suggesting for a year that the Great White North is much likelier to stumble into recession.
While employment and inflation trends seem positive, consumer confidence remains in the doldrums. Business confidence is in the red, receiving only a small uplift from the positive economic figures south of the border recently.
Meanwhile, Canada’s key resource sector is under growing pressure: the “commodity terms of trade” indicator (compiled by Citigroup) slid from positive into neutral territory over the three most recent readings.
The US revisited: pondering a soft landing
Recession pressure: 71%
We wrap up this chart pack by revisiting our US dashboard. Compared with two weeks ago, new and revised data has given us a more complete picture. Our recession indicator for December has crept somewhat higher (from 60%).
Is a recession inevitable, or will Fed Chair Jay Powell pull off his coveted soft landing? Or, a third possibility: will continued robust inflationary growth after all these rate hikes wrong-foot the markets and central bankers?
As we noted in January, some leading economic and financial indicators (such as the NFIB’s small-business confidence index) seem to have bottomed out earlier in 2023, bolstering the case for a soft landing.
Data trickling in for January has been positive overall versus historic norms: unemployment, consumer confidence, even truck sales.
However, the inverted yield curve, a classic recession indicator, is still flashing bright red – especially after Chair Powell downplayed rate-cut prospects.
Chart packs
Geopolitical risk perceptions depend on where you are sitting
In Germany, Russia’s war on Ukraine is perceived as the riskiest geopolitical crisis in 40 years. Americans are concerned, but Stateside, nothing compares to 9/11.
This chart uses measures of risk from Economic Policy Uncertainty, an academic group that measures news coverage to create indices relating to challenges ranging from infectious diseases to wars.
We used their data a year ago, after Russia invaded Ukraine. This is a different visualisation, which tracks a global geopolitical risk index against the perception of risk in nine major countries.
The “pulses,” or bubble size, reflect a deviation from the mean, i.e. the greater salience of geopolitical risk at a given moment.
Germany is notable for how much its perception of risk surged. Europe’s biggest economy lost the source of energy that was key to its economic model and has had to pledge a military revamp as full-scale land wars return to the continent, not too far east of Germany’s borders.
The Japanese are selling their foreign bond holdings
Japanese investors bought enormous quantities of foreign bonds over the last twenty years, seeking yield wherever they could find it. That trend has reversed.
During the period of very low – and sometimes negative – interest rates in Japan, the nation’s investors sought out the much steeper yield curves abroad. (Japan’s companies are also famously cash-rich, and had a limited need to issue corporate bonds.)
Key to this investing strategy was the ability to inexpensively hedge currency risk. Hedging is now more expensive (and local yields are higher) amid speculation that the Japanese central bank will abandon its yield control policy and let rates rise.
The bottom panel of our chart shows how Japanese investors have been reducing foreign government and corporate bond holdings for about half a year. The top panel of our chart shows the net position on a global basis; as the chart is in negative territory, the rest of the world now holds more Japanese debt than vice versa.
Real Effective Exchange Rates
This Real Effective Exchange Rate is a weighted average of a country’s currency in relation to other major currencies, using weighting based on trade balances. When it rises, it means a country is losing trade competitiveness.
This chart shows nations’ deviation from their long-term average and five-year average REER to give a sense of which nations are benefiting from a devalued currency – Colombia and Turkey among them – or are suffering from an arguably overvalued one, as seems to be the case for the Czech Republic.
On the right-hand side, the size of the bubbles reflect the impact on imports and exports.
Chinese equities await earnings surprises as the next leg of optimism
The Chinese stock market has jumped as the nation unwound zero-Covid policies. For the momentum to be sustained, watch out for positive earnings surprises.
The MSCI China Index is up about 40 percent since December. The top panel of our chart shows recent measures of inflation surprises (lower price increases than expected) as well as better-than-predicted economic news.
However, the bottom panel shows that earnings per share are still expected to shrink 10 percent year-on-year, looking 12 months out. The 12-month forward price-earnings ratio for the index is 11.3, a discount to its long-term average of 11.6.
Will the economic rebound lead to revised profit expectations?
US inflation over the decades
Readers of a certain age will associate the 1970s with oil crises, disco and inflation. (And perhaps imagine the 1950s as a golden economic era of price stability.)
The 1980s, meanwhile, are known as the decade where central bankers conquered the inflation they had helped create with loose policy. But as our chart shows, it remains the second-most-inflationary decade in the postwar period. The Great Inflation (1965-82) persisted well into the first half of the decade.
How will the 2020s be remembered? Some 36 months in, after the pandemic’s disruptions and hyper-stimulative monetary policy, and after the war in Ukraine upended commodity markets, we have experienced the most inflationary start to a decade since 1982-83.
What will be the ultimate shape of that 2020s line? It depends whether you are on “team transitory.”
Chairman Powell has vowed to keep raising rates. Inflation is slowing, but remains far above the Fed’s 2% target.
The dollar is whipsawing perceptions of central bank balance sheets
The weaker dollar is having some interesting macroeconomic effects. For one, it’s complicating the picture as we assess how much central banks are tightening monetary policy.
For most of 2022, central banks were shrinking their balance sheets to unwind the extraordinary stimulus of the pandemic. But in the fourth quarter, as the dollar started weakening, their combined balance sheets started to expand again in US dollar terms.
This happened even though most of the major central banks were indeed shrinking their balance sheet as measured in their own currencies. In dollar terms, only the Fed, Bank of Canada and ECB have succeeded in shrinking their balance sheets.
Our chart compares the expansion, contraction and rebound of the balance sheets in dollar terms with a hypothetical scenario – slower, but steadier balance sheet shrinkage – that held the dollar’s value constant as of Jan. 1, 2021 (before the “King Dollar” rally that began halfway through that year).
Sticky inflation in Germany
This chart breaks down the components of a sticky period in German inflation. While other nations are seeing price increases ease, German inflation accelerated to 8.7 percent year-on-year in January.
The main contributor to the rebound, as our chart shows, is a grouping of some of the basic costs of living: “housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuel.”
Given this inflation picture – and some signs of a rebound in German growth, based on PMI figures and the ZEW survey – it’s no surprise that markets are starting to price in a more hawkish ECB this year.
Chinese traffic is a bullish signal
China’s roads are filling with traffic again, as you’d expect now that the zero-Covid policy has ended.
This chart tracks the seasonal course of congestion on Chinese roads, with the lulls from the Lunar New Year holiday period clearly visible during the first two months of the year.
The purple line for the Covid years was well below the pre-Covid trend, in green. The trajectory for 2023 so far shows we are probably back to the old normal.
That would be consistent with the recent run of positive economic data from China, including a PMI figure that showed a swing back to growth. That’s bullish for the world economy.
Transport stocks as a leading recessionary indicator
Transportation stocks have a track record of being a reliable leading economic indicator. And their relative performance recently gives cause for concern.
This chart tracks year-on-year performance of the S&P 500’s transport index relative to its industrial index.
Underperformance, in red, shows periods where there was a greater risk of recession. And this barometer is at a seven-year low.
To be sure, there was no recession in 2016-17, and the red zone is far from the depths that anticipated the 2001 recession.
Watching the global heat map for recessionary red
This table is a heat map measuring quarter-on-quarter economic growth for nations in the G20. Green means expansion. Red means contraction.
One of the great debates of 2022 was whether the US entered recession, and indeed, there were two consecutive quarters of (barely) negative economic growth.
But the US is growing again and the proportion of red on the heat map appears to be shrinking, not spreading. China’s reopening might well result in more green on the map in 2023.
Comparing Chinese bear markets and bouncebacks
China’s zero-Covid policy was tough on its equity market. As our chart shows, it was the worst bear market in recent memory, posting a maximum intra-year decline, or drawdown, of 46 percent from its peak that year.
However, steep declines by the MSCI China Index are not unusual. As the European sovereign debt crisis sideswiped markets around the world, the Chinese benchmark posted a maximum drawdown of 38 percent during 2011.
Amid US-China trade tensions during the Trump administration, the drawdown reached 33 percent. And in 2015, a period of market froth in China was followed by a 35 percent decline on recession concerns.
For investors gauging whether history endorses a bet on China’s reopening, there was a modest rebound after the 2011, 2015 and 2018 episodes, averaging 18 percent over 6 months and 23 percent over a year and a half. The MSCI China Index is already 30 percent above its October trough.
A decade plus of Slowbalisation
This chart tracks our globalisation barometer – as measured by the sum of exports and imports as a percentage of GDP.
Our chart starts in 1970, at the tail end of what can be considered the postwar era of reconstruction, international cooperation, Keynesian economic approaches and fixed exchange rates.
In about 1980, a trend towards economic liberalisation began. This second wave of globalisation, in green, was marked by growing access to cheap, deregulated labour in emerging markets and other innovations such as container shipping.
Since the financial crisis, globalisation looks more like “slowbalisation,” with the barometer in retreat. Tariffs are rising, environmental concerns are prompting consumers to seek locally produced goods, and countries are aiming to “reshore” industries at a time of heightened geopolitical tension.
Carbon taxes may be the next blow to globalisation, making shipping more expensive.
Loose policy in Japan means central banks are adding liquidity again
Last month, we wrote about Japan’s yield control policies. The central bank is an outlier globally – the last of its peers to maintain negative interest rates. Japan had recently surprised markets by widening the range of acceptable government bond yields, prompting speculation that a greater policy shift could follow.
But the Bank of Japan vowed to double down and keep buying bonds to keep yields low. As our chart shows, these purchases were recently bigger than the Federal Reserve’s quantitative tightening program.
This means that on a global basis, central banks are once again adding liquidity to global financial markets. This likely contributed to the rally across equity and credit markets in January.
India is slowing down in our Nowcast
Our latest Nowcast takes a look at India, which is likely to surpass China’s population this year while also being buffeted by higher oil prices.
Nowcast models aim to “predict” the present for the economy, given there is a lag before data becomes available, and keep investors ahead of the curve.
We used a variety of alternative high-frequency indicators to construct this regression model, including rainfall, coal stocks, power production and railway freight earnings. We combined these with more traditional data, such as unemployment, industrial production, and manufacturing PMI. All of these variables are leading indicators of GDP.
However, Macrobond users can change any of these input variables to create their own Nowcast.
Our model is predicting that India experienced a slowdown in the fourth quarter, with year-on-year growth of about 3.7 percent, below the average of the last couple of years.
Bond candlesticks show yields burning historically bright
It was one of the greatest ever routs for bonds in 2022 as inflation picked up and central bankers tightened monetary policy. Corporate bonds were no exception.
Now, with yields at attractive levels, many observers of the debt market are saying “bonds are back” as an interesting investment. Many corporate bond yields, in fact, are at a two-decade high.
This visualisation uses “candlesticks” to show what corporate bonds in different categories – European, American, high-yield or not – are yielding. Yields are compared to their much lower levels five years ago, their historic extremes, and percentile ranges in different eras.
Banks tighten loan standards and that has implications for high yield
While yields on the most speculative corporate debt are higher than five years ago, one indicator suggests there may be more substantial moves to come.
The chart tracks measures of alternative ways companies can borrow money: via bank loans or tapping the public debt markets.
The green line tracks a US high-yield index. The blue line measures the percentage of domestic banks tightening or loosening standards for commercial and industrial loans to small firms.
Historically, they tend to correlate. But recently, there is a severe divergence, with more and more banks presenting companies with tougher loan conditions. Will higher yields in the world of higher-risk credit securities follow, as history suggests?
Women in the workforce and C suite from Norway to Egypt
One of the most remarkable economic megatrends has been the rise of women in the workforce. But this has evolved quite differently around the world.
This chart tracks a range of countries, charting the participation rate for women in the workforce (the x-axis) against the share of CEOs that are female (the y-axis). This attempts to measure how much a country has eliminated the “glass ceiling.”
We can broadly split nations into three categories.
Egypt, India, the UAE and Saudi Arabia are notable for having both low female workforce participation and few female CEOs.
Norway, Singapore and France are notable for having both a high share of women in the workforce and a significantly greater proportion of female CEOs than other countries. (To be sure, even in Norway, men account for more than 85 percent of those top jobs.)
Most countries, including the US, cluster together in between those extremes: many women in the workforce, but not so many CEOs.
Chinese tourists are slowly returning to Japan
China’s great reopening is expected to impact many other economies. (See the replay of our recent webinar on the topic for more.)
When we asked Macrobond users to share their 2023 outlooks, several were particularly interested in Thailand, a popular spot for Chinese tourists pre-pandemic. Tourism is so important to the southeast Asian nation that one observer was predicting a big year for the Thai baht.
This chart examines another popular destination for Chinese tourists: Japan. It breaks down Chinese travellers’ spending in their eastern neighbour by category, including hospitality and accommodation.
It’s easy to spot the three years where China closed its borders to fight Covid. For more than 10 quarters between 2020 and 2022, the tourism spending was nil. Chinese travellers were travelling and spending again in the fourth quarter – but only just.
Fewer blizzards mean more Americans came to work
Here’s a potentially surprising side effect of climate change: fewer “snow days” keeping workers in wintry nations from their jobs.
The chart tracks how many US workers were prevented from showing up to their jobs due to bad weather. It charts the historical mean over the course of the year. Unsurprisingly, January and February see the most absences.
But this year, just 280,000 workers were affected in January, well below the 450,000 average.
The mild weather might also be a factor in the biggest surprise from that January jobs report: the labour market’s resilience after a year of monetary tightening.
PMIs suggest emerging markets will grow while developed markets stumble
The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) is a measure of whether economic contraction is likely, based on whether supply-chain managers are expecting growth to pick up or recede.
This chart shows the Composite PMIs (in blue) for various nations and groups of countries, as well as its subcomponents in manufacturing and services. A reading above 50 means expansion; below 50 means contraction.
Pulling out some global trends, it emerging markets are expected to expand while developed markets contract.
China’s reopening is in focus here, as well; expansion is predicted, barely. we can see that World Emerging Markets are expected to expand (PMI Composite of 51.9 in January), whereas Developed Markets are expected to contract (48.4). Second, China is expected to expand (51.1) following the end of it strict zero Covid Policy. Third, at the extreme, we have India which is expected to have the most robust growth (57.5) and the US which is expected to have the lowest (46.8). The UK are not far from the US (48.5). Finally, this rebound will be mainly driven by the Services (65% are above 50) than the manufacturing (23%).
FTSE 100 peaks and troughs
It took four years, but Britain’s key stock index has started setting records again.
This chart visualises the FTSE 100 through various “eras,” book-ended by market peaks and crises. In retrospect, the 1990s were golden; the benchmark tripled between the “Black Monday” crash of 1987 and the peak of the dot-com bubble. Returns since then are unimpressive.
The positive run recently might seem at odds with the drip-feed of doom-and-gloom UK news. However, many big multinationals in the FTSE 100 make most of their income abroad (and can benefit in headline terms when profits are converted back into devalued pounds). The FTSE 100 is probably set for more gains if global growth rebounds.
The divergence between the FTSE 100 and smaller companies more exposed to the domestic UK economy is stark. FactSet Market Aggregate data shows that profit estimates for larger companies are being raised by analysts, while being downgraded for small-caps – even as smaller equities remain more expensive on a price/earnings basis.
Capital is flowing into Chinese stocks
Last week, we examined how China’s great reopening was lifting metal prices and prompting the IMF to upgrade Chinese – and global – economic growth forecasts.
The end of the zero-Covid policy is also encouraging international investors to take a punt on Chinese stocks.
This chart tracks net equity inflows into emerging market equities so far this year. Barely a month into 2023, flows to China are dwarfing the rest.
Recent Chinese economic data releases have been positive, with manufacturing and non-manufacturing indicators suggesting expansion over the next three to six months.
Conflicting traffic signals for the US economy
US job figures this month showed hiring surged, suggesting the economy is more resilient than many expected. But is there reason to be wary of excess optimism?
This chart is a visualisation of selected US economic barometers, showing where they stand relative to history in percentile terms.
Bright green areas highlight indicators signaling a low recession risk: financial conditions, consumer confidence and, indeed, employment.
In fact, all three indicators have improved significantly when compared with six months earlier (the smaller, purple dots). Indeed, the IMF is still forecasting growth of 1.4% for the US this year.
Other indicators are in the red zone, i.e. suggestive of recession – and falling. These include the OECD’s leading indicator, business confidence, and the spread between 10-year and 2-year bond yields (a classic predictor of recession when negative).
Industrial production – moving from neutral to borderline red over the past six months – might be the tiebreaker.
The US job market refuses to roll over
Back to that surprise jobs number, which reflects how tight the US labour market has been despite a string of interest-rate increases.
This chart tracks the ratio of job openings to unemployed people over the past two decades. The latest figure is 1.9 jobs available for every unemployed person – barely below its recent peak. By comparison, even in the mid-2000s economic boom, there was less than one job available for every person searching for work.
This ratio is an important barometer. It could presage long-lasting wage inflation, and, therefore, higher interest rates for longer, even with a weak economy. On Feb. 7, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said employment trends suggest the fight against inflation could last “quite a bit of time.”
Emerging market interest rates diverge
As the Fed hiked interest rates over the past year, emerging markets had to choose whether to follow suit. Their central bankers have taken divergent paths, based on specific economic conditions.
This chart tracks emerging markets by inflation rate (the dots, measured on the left-hand scale) and deviation from their 10-year real interest rate average (the bars). Green and orange dots reflect lower- and higher-than usual inflation, respectively.
Five countries have higher-than-usual real rates: Brazil, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Chile and India. (Mexico recently surprised markets with a greater-than-expected hike to control inflation, outpacing the Fed.)
Ten countries have a lower interest rate than their 10-year average: China, Colombia, Peru, Indonesia, South Africa, Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand and Poland (whose central bank has left rates unchanged for five straight meetings, despite elevated inflation).
With the Fed widely expected to slow the pace of tightening, that means more flexibility for emerging market central bankers, and possibly stronger economic growth for their nations.
Visualising national exposure to the energy crisis in Europe
As we wrote at the start of this year, the EU dodged a energy-shortage bullet. It sourced LNG supply and benefited from an unusually warm winter, meaning gas stocks stayed high even after the Russians shut Nord Stream and the pipeline was later sabotaged.
But it’s worth examining the region’s structural exposure to Russian gas before the war in Ukraine. Dependence differed widely.
This visualisation – which annualises 2021 figures – shows how much given nations used gas as a percentage of total energy use (the x-axis) and the percentage of Russian supply in gas imports (y-axis). The bubble size reflects GDP.
As ever, Germany stood out, receiving a greater share of its gas from Russia than all but Finland, Latvia and Bulgaria. The Dutch were by far the most exposed to gas prices in general, but imported relatively little from the Russians. (They are now in the midst of a debate on when to close Europe’s largest gas field.)
The chart shows the challenge of weaning Europe off Russian supply following decades where gas was considered a cheap, abundant, dependable and relatively clean alternative to coal.
A Saudi foreign trade dashboard
Saudi Arabia’s trade breakdown is, perhaps, predictable. It exports petroleum, and imports a wide range of everything else, as our chart shows.
While the desert kingdom’s leadership has moved to diversify the economy, change is coming slowly. In most categories, the nation is importing more (as measured by value) than it did a year earlier.
However, the value of petroleum products exported has surged 70 percent from a year earlier. As China reopens its economy, that trend could continue.
Over the longer term, a transition to greener economic models that would require less Saudi crude remains a risk – as our dashboard illustrates.
A history of debt ceiling drama
The “debt ceiling” fight dominates US news headlines, as we discussed last week. But does it really affect the stock market? There is evidence that it does.
In theory, if Republicans and Democrats cannot agree on raising the debt limit, the US would be unable to borrow, and thus unable to make some of its payments owed to people and companies.
This chart examines the performance of a basket of industries deemed sensitive to such a scenario: pharma, biotech and life sciences, healthcare equipment and services, commercial and professional services, and capital goods.
We tracked the debt-ceiling dramas of 2015, 2013, 2021 and 2011 – the year the clash led S&P to impose its first-ever downgrade of the US credit rating.
There is a distinct pattern: the “black swan” possibility of a US debt default is seemingly enough to cause our basket to underperform versus the S&P 500 in the ten weeks before the debt-limit deadline. In the weeks after the deadline, there has tended to be a relief rally.
Our European inflation heatmap is finally turning green
We’re revisiting our inflation heatmap for Europe, which breaks down the momentum for price increases month-on-month by country.
Dark red means the highest inflation; dark green the lowest. The most recent values are on the left side of the heatmap – showing a wave of disinflation is washing across Europe.
That’s in stark contrast to the sea of red when we ran this heatmap in June. Sharp monetary tightening has finally started to tame inflation after it hit record highs.
The 0.4 percent month-on-month drop for the eurozone in January represents a third consecutive decline.
The Chinese reopening effect
China is reopening, and the International Monetary Fund is adjusting its global growth estimates accordingly.
The chart plots nations based on the IMF’s estimates for real GDP growth this year and the degree of its most recent estimate revision. Put another way. one axis shows whether a country is in recession or expansion; the other shows whether things have improved or deteriorated since the last IMF assessment in October.
China is making the biggest move on the chart, dragging the world economy with it, as it reverses the zero-Covid policy; the IMF’s estimate for world GDP growth was revised upwards to 2.9 percent for 2023.
The UK also stands out; as trade frictions from Brexit and higher interest rates bite, it’s now projected to be the only G7 economy in recession.
It’s also notable that emerging markets as a whole are expected to outpace their developed peers, whose growth rate the IMF projects at an anemic 1.2 percent.
The Russian demographic pyramid
As Russia reportedly considers adding hundreds of thousands of men to the 300,000 mobilised to fight in Ukraine, it’s worth examining the demographic challenge the nation already faces.
This chart breaks down the Russian population by age and sex. The lingering effects of the post-Soviet transition are readily visible: fertility rates – which remain among the lowest in the world – plunged in the 1990s, as seen by the dearth of people in their 20s today.
And the nation has long experienced high mortality rates from preventable causes, i.e. alcoholism: the male half of the pyramid shrinks rapidly after age 60. The nation is suffering a historic population decline.
Will the Ukraine war have a similar effect on future demographic pyramids? Between combat deaths, emigration to avoid conscription, and delays to family formation, it seems likely, depending on how long the war lasts.
A renewal of positive growth surprises in Europe
There has finally been a run of good news for European economies and markets. This week, eurozone GDP beat analysts’ estimates, and the International Monetary Fund said Europe had adapted to higher energy costs more quickly than expected. (Those energy costs also turned out to be less catastrophic than feared last summer.)
This chart is a “surprise clock” for the euro zone using data from Citigroup; economic surprises are on the x axis, and inflation surprises on the y axis. A surprise is defined as the divergence between published data and expectations.
The more unwelcome surprises – higher-than-expected inflation – have been steadily trending down for the past 12 months. (Analysts had constantly underestimated inflation in recent years.)
But with economic growth surprises turning around strongly recently, we are in a bit of a sweet spot for investors as inflation recedes to more standard levels.
Slowing US trend growth since the 1990s
The decade of Bill Clinton’s presidency and dot-com IPOs was a much healthier era for the US economy.
This chart measures “trend growth,” defined as the long-term, non-inflationary increase in GDP caused by an increase in a country's productive capacity. The trend rate of economic growth is the average sustainable rate of economic growth over time.
This chart breaks down trend growth into four contributing components: labour quality, labour quantity, capital and “Total Factor Productivity” growth – the difference between output growth and growth of all factor inputs, usually labour and capital.
It’s notable that “labour quantity” has been much weaker since 1999. This is linked to demographic change, with fewer prime-age adults working and slower population growth.
Thinking about where rates will be in 2025
This week, the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and Bank of England all raised their key interest rate. We’re well into a tightening cycle globally, notable for central banks hiking in sync.
But markets are expecting Europe and the US to be in very different places come 2025.
As our chart shows, for the ECB, the market anticipates that rates in two years’ time will be back where they were earlier this week. However, the US is expected to have a significantly lower key rate than it does today.
For the UK and EU, rates will have to stay higher for longer to restrain sticky inflation. Or so says the market.
For the US, this suggests that inflation will be more easily conquered – or that the Federal Reserve will be fighting a recession. Perhaps both.
Nasdaq has its best start to a year in decades
It’s like a trip back to the golden era of the FAANG. Meta, the former Facebook, just posted its biggest intraday stock jump in a decade. Amazon is at a three-month high.
The recent performance of tech stocks has pushed the Nasdaq 100 index to its best January in at least 20 years, as our chart shows. This followed a 33 percent decline in 2022. Dead-cat bounce, or a lasting sentiment shift?
Tech layoffs have been in the news, as we wrote last month, but the sector has tended to trade in tandem with perceptions of Federal Reserve policy. As Chairman Powell raised rates, tech stocks were trading at an interestingly low valuation by the end of 2022. This week, Powell said that the “disinflation process has started,” and a less hawkish Fed is being priced in.
Stepping toward a higher US debt ceiling
It’s that time in the US political process again: Republicans and Democrats are tussling over the debt ceiling.
Total public debt has increased to USD31.38 trillion, approaching the statutory debt limit of USD31.4 billion, as our chart shows.
If this ceiling is not raised and extraordinary measures are exhausted, the U.S. government is legally unable to borrow money to pay its financial obligations – requiring, in theory, a debt-payment default.
This is, of course, highly improbable, and the debt limit is very likely to be increased again, adding a new “step” to our chart.
But this theoretical prospect led to S&P’s first-ever downgrade of the US credit rating in 2011 – during a previous debt-ceiling showdown between the GOP and the Obama administration.
Reawakening demand for metals in China
This chart shows recent price trends for industrial metals. They are broadly benefiting from China’s reopening.
Zinc, copper, nickel and aluminium are all up at least 12 percent over the past three months.
Brazil trade surplus is set to shrink
Santos is the busiest container port in Latin America, most famous for exporting coffee, sugar and soy across the world. (It’s also known for the football legend Pele, and his funeral took place in the city last month.)
The ebb and flow of shipments from Santos reflect trends in the global economy – and Brazil’s trade surplus (or deficit).
This chart shows how container flows at Santos are closely correlated with moves to the trade balance, 10 months in the future. Over the short term, we should expect a shrinking surplus in line with the weakening global economy. As the key Chinese market reopens after unwinding zero-Covid, there is scope for Brazil’s trade balance to improve in the medium term.
The evolution of emissions by country
The following charts show how the composition of the world’s carbon emitters has changed over the past 20 years. It’s no surprise to see that China’s industrialisation has been a game-changer; as the US, Japanese and European share shrinks on a relative basis, Asia’s biggest economy now accounts for almost a third of global emissions, more than doubling its proportion since 2003.
India’s contribution is also of note, rising to 7 percent of global emissions from 4 percent. Overall carbon emissions have increased to 37 billion tonnes from 27 billion tonnes 20 years earlier.
These trends highlight the importance of US-China climate talks, which resumed late last year. US climate envoy John Kerry said in Davos last week that he was hopeful about a breakthrough.
Dollar Index weakness amid speculation about a less hawkish Fed
King Dollar was one of the main themes of 2022; the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes sent the global reserve currency surging against almost all peers.
The Dollar Index (DXY) measures the greenback against the currencies of major US trading partners. As the chart below shows, we have had a reversal this year amid increasing bets that the Fed will be less hawkish than some feared. Service and manufacturing PMI indicators are predicting recession.
There are two notable trends in this chart: 1) before the pandemic, swings in the Dollar Index were not nearly as extreme. And 2) the Japanese yen has been a much bigger factor in the last 12 months than it was previously, when DXY reflected more of a dollar-euro dynamic. (Read guest blogger Harry Ishihara’s recent comments on the Japanese reticence to change course on monetary policy.)
The stock market rotates after tech selloff last year
The narrative for equity markets is also changing with perceptions of the Fed’s path this year. Indeed, markets are anticipating the next rate hike will be 25 basis points, rather than a half percentage point. Sectoral trends in the equity market are also consistent with an economy that will not deteriorate as much as some feared.
This dashboard breaks down the market by sector. Interestingly, as we head into a potential recession, traditionally defensive stocks – consumer staples, healthcare and utilities – are underperforming.
Meanwhile, the pain has stopped, or at least paused, in the world of tech. Communication Services and Information Technology are atop the dashboard – as measured by not just recent performance, but the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and stock momentum relative to the previous 50 days.
A measure of US analyst downgrades is at the highest in 30 years
To be sure, many warning signs for US markets remain. This chart tracks analyst downgrades – often an excellent leading indicator for stock-market underperformance.
In particular, the chart measures the relative number of earnings-per-share downgrades for US equities versus global equities over the previous 100 days.
This reflects the fact that leading macroeconomic indicators degraded more quickly in the US than elsewhere.
The persistent discount for Russian crude
As Russia persists with its war in Ukraine, so do the sanctions on Russian crude.
This chart shows the price divergence between the key western European (Brent) and Russian (Urals) crude-oil benchmarks. Starting almost a year ago, when the war began, Russian oil became about $30 a barrel cheaper as the Brent price spiked. (This spread, which has stayed relatively consistent, is tracked in the bottom section of the chart and is near its widest since the start of the conflict.)
In September, the G7 nations imposed an effective cap of $60 a barrel on the Urals price.
In December, as the EU banned imports of Russian oil, we showed how Russia turned to India and China to find buyers for all that discounted crude.
Projecting terminal interest rates
When will central banks stop hiking rates? It’s fair to say that over the past year, that’s been the overarching question in macroeconomics.
We have revisited this theme several times: in our recap for 2022, we showed how markets no longer expected the Bank of England to out-hike the Federal Reserve, as they did for several months in the second half of the year. (This moment can be seen where the lines on the chart below cross, in about November)
Rather than project the future interest rate curve, this chart purely shows what the market was anticipating the peak policy rate would be over time. After steady increases in tandem over most of 2022, the lines have flattened as concern about inflation eases.
Notably, as recently as a year ago, the terminal rate was seen as zero for the ECB.
Time traveling with pivot expectations
Here is a different visualisation of this theme. Rather than tracking how high futures markets expect the peak (or “terminal rate”) to be for various central banks, this chart tracks when markets believe the Fed, ECB and BoE will stop hiking.
Markets have consistently expected the Fed to be the first to stop hiking for most of the past year, but it was still a different world in July: markets expected the Fed would have reached its terminal rate already by now, a full year ahead of the ECB. Meanwhile, expectations that the UK’s central bank would still be hiking in 2024 have faded.
Despite what futures markets are showing, it is notable how many observers remain sceptical that the Fed will be ready to “pivot” in May, as this chart suggests.
Bah Humbug for more Christmas shoppers
It appears that the cost-of-living crisis – and perhaps concerns about a worsening economy in 2023 – prompted US consumers to hold back last Christmas, as they did the year before.
This chart tracks how December spending compared to its November equivalent over the course of recent decades. There have been surprisingly few Christmas splurges lately.
While this chart tracks US retail sales, we have noticed disappointing figures in other countries as well.
Visualisation of urbanisation
The United Nations calls urbanisation one of four “demographic mega-trends,” along with population growth, aging and international migration. As a nation’s people move to cities, education, income and longevity generally improve.
The visualisation below charts wealth against the urbanisation rate for some of the world’s biggest economies. Population is indicated by the size of the bubble.
We wrote last week about India overtaking China as the most populous country. As this chart shows, India is still far behind China on urbanisation; it is the most notably rural country on the chart.
UK public borrowing creeps higher
British deficit spending is creeping back into pandemic-era territory, as our chart shows. (The peak months for the Covid-19 furlough spending and business-support programs are shown in the shaded area on our chart; January is notable as the month when the UK posts a surplus from tax receipts.)
Public sector borrowing last month was GBP27.4 billion, the highest December figure since monthly records began in January 1993.
This reflects two main macro themes of 2022: surging interest rates and the energy crisis. The UK spent more to help households with their utility bills, while interest payments to service the national debt soared.
The rising rate environment is a key factor behind why markets reacted so strongly to former Prime Minister Liz Truss’ scrapped plan to borrow even more.
India is poised to overtake China as the most populous country
According to United Nations figures released this week, India is probably going to overtake China by population this year.
As our charts show, both nations are currently estimated to have populations of 1.43 billion people. But the trend lines are quite different – as is the demographic breakdown shown in the two charts.
India’s death rate has fallen, life expectancy is rising, incomes have increased, and the birth rate remains high. That means the population is young: more than half of Indians are under the age of 40. The population isn’t projected to start declining (under the UN’s fertility assumptions) until the 2060s.
By contrast, China’s population is aging and has started to decline – a legacy of the one-child policy between 1980 and 2015.
Scepticism about yield curve control in Japan
The Bank of Japan is the last of its peers to maintain negative interest rates. It brought in yield curve control (YCC) in 2016; as the central bank owned half the nation’s bond market, the effectiveness of further quantitative easing was limited. YCC allowed the BoJ to control the shape of the yield curve, keeping short and medium rates close to the 0 percent target, without depressing long-term yields excessively.
Late last year, Japan surprised markets by widening the acceptable range, as the shaded area of our chart shows, to 0.5 percent. This stirred speculation that a greater policy shift could follow, given the tightening cycle being executed by its global peers.
The YCC was in the news again this week. Amid calls to abandon the policy and restore bond-market liquidity, the Bank of Japan vowed to double down and keep buying bonds, as it had throughout 2022’s inflation-driven fixed-income selloff. The yen declined.
As our chart shows, 10-year swap rates have started to diverge significantly from the 10-year yield, indicating that the market is questioning the sustainability of this strategy.
Cracks in the US labour market
With US tech industry layoffs in the news, our chart breaks down trends in the nation’s labour market by sector during December.
To be sure, unemployment remains near a record low. But Fed Chair Jerome Powell is watching closely as he seeks to cool the economy.
Indeed, as Silicon Valley scales back overly optimistic growth forecasts and some pandemic-era business models were in fact not the “new normal,” technology shed the most workers among industries last month, according to data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
In the No. 2 and 3 spots are financial-services companies and insurers, paring their workforce amid speculation that higher interest rates will result in recession. Health care and energy posted the biggest job gains.
Nowcasting Germany
Nowcast models aim to “predict” the present, given there is a lag before data becomes available, and keep investors ahead of the curve. Last week, we examined the US and presented the community with a template to examine real-time GDP.
Now, we turn our attention to Europe’s biggest economy. This Nowcast uses a regression model based on weekly and monthly German data that have been shown to be leading indicators for headline GDP, with a significant correlation – as the chart shows.
These indicators include a truck toll mileage index, the Bundesbank’s weekly activity index, and the well-known IFO business climate survey, among others.
Macrobond users can change any of these input variables to create their own Nowcast.
Amid Germany’s disproportionate exposure to both China’s slowdown and higher energy and food prices in 2022, our template Nowcasts that the economy shrank 1.15 percent in the fourth quarter.
A scenario for shrinking US inflation that stays above the Fed’s target
This chart aims to forecast US price increases in 2023 using a selection of leading indicators to predict three components of inflation.
For housing, we used data from Zillow, the real-estate marketplace. For food and beverages, we selected fertiliser prices as a leading indicator. And to forecast the consumer price index (CPI) excluding food and housing, we selected the Atlanta Fed’s business uncertainty survey on employment growth.
These indicators lead the specified component by 5 to 13 months.
Based on these historic correlations, and similar trends for the three components, our model predicts inflation will moderate – posting a 4.2 percent year-on-year increase in May 2023. This would be consistent with a recession and weaker oil prices.
Will this result in a Fed pivot? It’s worth noting that this model shows inflation will still be well above the Fed’s 2 percent target.
China increases public investment to support growth
China reported that fourth-quarter GDP increased by 2.9 percent, one of the slower prints in recent quarters. Generally, the nation’s economy was hampered by the lockdowns stemming from the zero-Covid policy in 2022, as well as a property slump.
Our first chart tracks GDP growth and its components: final consumption exposure, investment and net exports.
The second chart shows how China has increased public investment during this slowdown to support growth; by contrast, private-sector investment in fixed assets has slowed and was nearly unchanged year-on-year in the fourth quarter.
Watch for these trends to evolve as the zero-Covid policy is relaxed. Observers will be watching whether a domestic growth rebound mitigates headwinds from a US recession.
US ISM clock is clearly in the contraction zone
This chart shows a “clock” tracking a year and a half of data from the US Institute of Supply Management (ISM). It presents both the ISM Manufacturing (x axis) and Non-Manufacturing (y axis) indices -- particularly key leading indicators for the US economy over the last 18 months.
Readings below 50 for either index indicate that a contraction is expected over the next three to six months; readings above 50 indicate that expansion is expected.
We track both the main indexes and the “new orders” subcomponent, considered the most forward-looking indicator.
All readings are below 50 – a recessionary signal.
Historic trends show US home supply is in line with moderating prices
This scatter chart tracks the historically negative correlation between the supply and price of US homes. The historic average for these two variables is roughly at the centre of the diagonal line.
As one might expect, prices increased in recent years as new supply was constrained in a context of strong growth and low interest rates.
However, the last six months – as tracked by the dashed line in purple – show how the Fed’s rate hikes are having an effect. (Back in November, we examined the impact on US homebuilding.)
Home prices have moderated sharply, despite a limited supply of homes, and we are more or less back in line with historic trends.
The surprisingly modest US stock valuation discount versus peers
This candlestick chart highlights equity valuations across selected markets, using a premium database from FactSet that aggregates companies. (This methodology could be easily used to analyse different equity sectors and investment styles instead.)
For the US, UK, Germany, Switzerland and aggregate measures of the developed and emerging markets, we track price-earnings (PE) ratios against historic median values and percentile ranges since 1999.
The chart shows the US is trading at only a modest valuation discount, despite growing expectations of a recession. On the other extreme, Germany trades at a significant discount; we have previously discussed the outsized impact of China’s zero-Covid policy and the energy crisis on the European country’s export-driven economy.
The British food inflation season lasted all year in 2022
Our final chart measures the seasonality of food inflation in the UK since 2015. Usually, British inflation is in fact not particularly seasonal; the main trend of note is that prices seem to increase in the run-up to Christmas.
The great exception is 2022: the year of post-pandemic supply chain disruptions, exacerbated by the UK’s departure from the EU’s customs union not long before – and the dislocation to global agricultural and fertiliser markets that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Prices for food and non-alcoholic drinks increased for 15 consecutive months, and posted a year-on-year increase of 16.8 percent in 2022 – the biggest annual increase since 1977.
As Britain’s cost-of-living crisis persists, hitting the poorest households worst of all, there was little relief to be had at the grocery store at the end of 2022.