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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
Manufacturing gets hit when credit crunches take hold
We’ve previously explored worries about a credit crunch in the US. This week, we turn to big business – showing the historic link between tightening loan conditions and manufacturing output.
This chart compares the Federal Reserve’s Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS) with the Institute for Supply Management’s purchasing managers index (PMI), the well-known survey of manufacturing executives.
PMI readings below 50 indicate economic activity is contracting. For the SLOOS series, which tracks Commercial & Industrial (C&I) loans, the inverted axis shows the net percentage of bankers reporting tightening credit standards. (I.e., a negative reading is good news, as it means more loan officers are reporting that standards are easing.)
The simultaneous troughs in previous recessions are clearly visible – as is the tandem move today; PMI has shown contraction for six months.
The French are economising on food as inflation bites
As French food inflation surged, recently accelerating to an annualised 15 percent rate, households coped by imposing spending discipline unseen in recent history. (Emmanuel Macron’s government, meanwhile, moved to cap retail prices for staple foods in March.)
This chart shows monthly food consumption in constant 2014 prices, removing inflation from the equation. As households broadly grew more affluent, the real household spend increased gradually from 1980 to the late 2010s. After spiking as consumers hoarded food at the start of the pandemic, this measure of spending has plunged almost 19 percent from its peak, as the second panel shows.
While this trend undoubtedly reflects consumers opting for discount retailers, swapping big brands for private labels and choosing cheaper cuts of meat, it’s also reasonable to see the decline as a proxy for a shrinking volume of food consumed.
Decade by decade, inflation and rates hit bond investors differently
This chart visualises the environment for buyers of French bonds over the decades, assessing the interplay between interest rates and the inflation that erodes real returns.
Our chart shows the evolution of real 10-year yields (subtracting inflation from the absolute yield), as well as month-by-month divergence from the decennial average.
The disinflationary 1980s and 1990s were a golden era for fixed-income investors in many countries; after inflation, French bonds yielded well over 4 percent for the better part of 20 years.
The current environment is even tougher than the famously inflationary 1970s. That decade saw real 10-year yields average little more than zero – while since 2020, the average real yield is well into negative territory.
The Dollar Index and the euro’s rebound
We wrote repeatedly last year about King Dollar: the greenback was rising against almost every other currency in the world.
This year, that trend has reversed.
Our chart breaks down the 2023 performance of the Dollar Index (DXY) – a benchmark that measures the greenback against the currencies of major US trading partners.
In recent weeks, only the yen is depreciating against the global reserve currency.
The biggest contributor to DXY’s drop has been the rising euro. While many observers of the Fed think that Jerome Powell has finished with rate hikes, the European Central Bank is perceived to have a relatively hawkish bias. That’s the reverse of 2022, when the Fed hiked aggressively, the ECB was slower, and the euro slid to parity with the dollar as funds flowed to the higher yields available in the US.
Thailand’s drought threatens global rice stocks
With the El Nino climate phenomenon back in the news, severe heat is hitting southeast Asia. Thailand is preparing for one of its driest years in a decade, and that’s important as the world grapples with rampant food inflation.
As our chart shows, since March, precipitation in the southeast Asian nation has been well below the average since 2013. It’s also been well below the 20-80 percentile range.
Thailand is the world’s second-biggest exporter of rice. It usually grows two water-intensive crops a year of this dietary staple. This year, the government has asked farmers to grow only one rice crop. The resulting drop in output has the potential to drive up global food prices more broadly.
The Italy-China trade conundrum
Europe’s economy is sluggish. China’s reopening has been disappointing to some. But somehow, Italian exports to China are undergoing a massive boom – even as Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni threatens to pull out of a trade deal with Asia’s biggest economy.
As our chart shows, recent monthly figures have broken from the recent trend. One might suspect surging Chinese demand for Italian luxury goods, given how that narrative has lifted France’s LVMH.
However, when breaking down the sectors, we see that the subcategory “Chemicals & Related Products,” which includes pharmaceuticals, is the overwhelming driver.
As Bloomberg News recently reported, one theory is that China’s consumers are buying a generic liver drug that’s dubiously believed to be effective in preventing Covid-19.
Other theories speculate that medicines produced elsewhere in the European Union are being routed through Italy for re-export.
Even amid financial stress, banks are leading earnings growth in Europe
It might be counterintuitive in a year that has seen a series of US bank failures and the demise of 166-year-old Credit Suisse – but banks are driving earnings-per-share growth in the basket of large-cap European stocks tracked by Macrobond and FactSet.
As the sectoral breakdown in our chart shows, aggregate EPS is up 12.5 percent. Industrials are the second-biggest contributor to that gain after financial stocks. Energy is the largest negative contributor.
The end of the zero-interest rate era means banks are making more spread on their core lending business. ING of the Netherlands became the latest big European bank to beat profit forecasts this week.
And as Bloomberg News recently wrote, smaller European banks have been more tightly regulated; larger banks have mostly been cutting their US exposure; and European banks don’t face the same level of deposit competition from money-market funds as US banks do. So far, Credit Suisse is seen as an idiosyncratic one-off.
A dashboard for the 60/40 portfolio (versus going all-in on stocks)
Traditionally, financial advisers recommended that investors with a moderate risk threshold put 60 percent of their money in equities, with the rest in bonds. Over the long haul, most academic research agrees that stocks outperform bonds, but a healthy slice of fixed income was recommended to provide downside protection and income.
Post-2008, this so-called “balanced” portfolio would have done well; tech stocks surged, and bonds benefited from ultra-low interest rates. But in 2022, 60/40 had one of its worst years ever.
Our dashboard explores how different blends of equities and fixed income would have performed since 2020, including last year’s annus horribilis. For stocks, we chose the S&P 500; for bonds, we chose the US 10-year Treasury.
Damage from last year’s bond rout means that to have generated any kind of absolute return over the past 3 ½ years, investors would need to have been at least 40 percent invested in stocks. A 60-40 portfolio would have made an average of just 3.5 percent per year, roughly in line with inflation.
If we’ve seen our last rate hike, history suggests upside for equities
The Fed recently hiked rates to a 16-year high. Well-known bond fund manager Jeffrey Gundlach decreed this week that “the Fed will not raise rates again.”
If Gundlach is right, history suggests that stocks have upside from here.
As our chart shows, the S&P 500 has risen an average of 12.2 percent in the 12 months that follow an end to a tightening cycle. The 25-75 percentile range includes cycles where the benchmark rose from about 12 percent to almost 30 percent.
This updates a previous chart, in December, to overlay the stock benchmark’s performance over the past year, assuming that this month’s rate increase was indeed the peak.
Federal Reserve rates tend to peak rather than plateau
This chart tracks the mean and median Fed funds rate in the days before and after final rate hikes in historic tightening cycles.
When the Federal Reserve stops tightening monetary policy, stocks tend to rise.
This might seem obvious. But part of this performance might be due to the historic tendency of the Fed to start cutting rates soon after it stops hiking them, as the chart shows.
Put another way: the Fed generally doesn’t hold rates at a high “plateau” for long. Is this time different? One camp in the inflation debate has long believed that the Fed is more likely to “pause – not pivot” to quick rate cuts.
Foreigners steer clear of Turkish debt
Turkey’s voters go to the polls on May 14. Recent surveys suggest that after two decades in power, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may be headed to defeat.
Reuters recently characterised the choice as “Erdogan's vision of a heavily-managed economy and its repeated bouts of crisis against a return to liberal orthodoxy under opposition challenger Kemal Kilicdaroglu.”
Indeed, Erdogan’s unconventional economic policies have dissuaded foreign investors, as our chart shows. Just 1 percent of Turkey’s government bonds are held by foreign investors – the lowest proportion in more than 15 years. Just five years ago, that figure was closer to 20 percent.
Foreign investors began divesting in 2018 after Erdogan began publicly pressuring the central bank not to raise interest rates to control inflation. The lira has tumbled almost 60 percent over the past two years, reaching record lows against the dollar.
The internationalisation of China’s renminbi
Two weeks ago, we explored the “de-dollarisation” debate. Returning to this theme, we measure the progress China has made in promoting international use of its currency.
This chart tracks use of the CIPS (the Cross-border Interbank Payment System). The value of receipts and payments in renminbi (or yuan) terms has been gradually rising; transactions using CIPS have surpassed 1 million per quarter.
China introduced CIPS in 2015 after Russia was sanctioned by the US and EU following its annexation of Crimea, complicating the use of the dollar in Russian oil exports. CIPS can be viewed as an alternative to the SWIFT platform, the messaging system that banks use to transfer funds across borders. (Major Russian banks are banned from SWIFT.)
Our second panel tracks the Renminbi Globalisation Index. The RGI, compiled by Standard Chartered, measures the overall growth in offshore yuan use. (Its methodology can be accessed here.) After declining in the first two years after CIPS was created, the RGI has steadily moved higher since 2018.
Brazil’s debt burden to grow as Lula targets scrapping a spending cap
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva defeated the conservative incumbent, Jair Bolsonaro, last year. Lula pledged to revoke the nation’s public spending cap, aiming to bolster spending on infrastructure and social benefits.
A congressional vote is expected soon on the cap, which Lula’s critics consider a pillar of fiscal credibility.
As our chart shows, the IMF projects that Latin America’s largest economy will see its ratio of public debt to gross domestic product gradually creep higher, approaching 100 percent by 2028.
By contrast, debt-to-GDP ratios are set to be broadly stable for Colombia, Mexico, Chile and Peru – and this measure of indebtedness had been falling sharply for Brazil during 2020-2022, despite the pandemic.
Betting on bullion paid off for Japanese and British gold bugs
This table shows the performance of gold since 2000. In most years, and in most currencies, bullion prices were either stable or rose. (As the bright red bar shows, 2013 was the big outlier; economies were recovering from the financial crisis, and the Fed was withdrawing stimulus. Money flowed out of gold funds.)
Given that gold is priced in dollars, returns from investing in the metal can vary significantly depending on your home currency. As British and Japanese investors saw the pound and yen sink against the dollar, gold returned 13 percent in GBP and 15 percent in JPY – versus a flat performance in dollar terms in 2022.
The post-FAANG mega-caps are driving the US stock rally
The biggest stocks are leading this year’s stock rally.
Our visualisation breaks down the year-to-date gain by the S&P 500, showing how the 10 biggest names by market value are overwhelmingly responsible for the rally – especially since March, when bank failures dented confidence in much of the rest of the equity space.
Most of these names are in Big Tech, evoking the “FAANG” surge that drove the 2010s. (That’s Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google – before a few name changes made that acronym obsolete.)
Today, the top 10 are Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, Alphabet (counting both stock classes as a single company), Berkshire Hathaway, Meta, UnitedHealth, ExxonMobil and Tesla.
The great global growth surprise of 2023
One of the positive surprises for 2023 is how resilient global growth has been, despite a record monetary tightening cycle. (China’s reopening likely has something to do with it.)
This chart uses measures of the purchasing managers index (PMI), which surveys executives about prevailing trends in their industry, to track the outlook in nations around the world. Readings below 50 indicate contraction.
It seemed that we were headed towards a broad recession in the second half of last year. But PMI is back above 50 for most economies.
Inflation in Gulf nations has been no big deal – and sometimes nonexistent
There’s a place in the world where inflation has not been particularly rampant over the past year: the oil-producing nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
As our chart shows, annualised inflation is running at about 3.3 percent for the GCC as a whole, much slower than the rate in the US and eurozone. The year-on-year comparisons are enlightening, as well. While Saudi inflation has picked up, Oman and Kuwait have experienced disinflation since January 2022; Bahrain is in outright deflation.
Five of the six GCC economies peg their currencies to the dollar, which can help keep inflation in check. Governments have also tended to use their oil wealth to proactively manage food and energy prices using subsidies.
Interestingly, booming Dubai, whose role as a global hub makes its economy quite different from the rest of the region, is experiencing the steepest pickup in inflation.
What’s in the news? Measuring perceptions of trade, war and pandemic
Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) is an academic group that uses newspaper archives to create indices relating to policy challenges ranging from budgets to geopolitics.
Effectively, by tracking headlines, EPU shows us the issue, or “dominant uncertainty,” that was top of mind at a given moment for the media, and, by extension, for the policy-making class.
We’ve previously charted their overall geopolitical risk index. This time, our chart examines EPU’s subindexes for the US, highlighting the issue that had the greatest risk perception over 20 years.
National security was top of mind in 2003, during the US invasion of Iraq, and again in the first half of 2022 as Russia invaded Ukraine. Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis rears its head in 2011-12. As the Trump and Biden administrations grappled with pandemic support and stimulus, “entitlement programs” are prominent in 2020-21.
Interestingly, Donald Trump’s 2018-19 trade war with China provoked a higher risk perception than any other issue tracked by EPU.
More Americans struggle with credit card debt again – relatively speaking
As interest rates go up and the economy slows, figures from the New York Fed show us that more Americans – especially younger ones – are struggling with debt burdens.
This chart tracks the percentage of credit-card balances transitioning into “serious delinquency.” This figure jumped by 2.5 percentage points for the 18-29 age bracket in 2022.
However, a longer-term perspective shows that credit-card struggles are only just returning to their pre-Covid levels – after extraordinary levels of subsidy to consumers and businesses through the pandemic.
Monetary tightening and falling unemployment
Intuitively, one might expect to see unemployment shoot up when policy makers stamp on the monetary brakes. But as our chart shows, that confuses the cause-and-effect relationship in real time.
History shows that tightening cycles usually progress as an economy gathers pace and sometimes overheats. I.e.: the labour market strengthens, unemployment falls, the Fed hikes. In 1980, 1995 and 2007, the unemployment rate stopped falling or crept higher only as the Fed came to the end of a round of tightening.
The present cycle stands out; with the Fed hiking rapidly during a time of post-pandemic labour shortages, US unemployment did not have that much lower to go.
Sell in May and go away? Only in Europe
A hoary stock-market cliché effectively advises investors to take the summer off. The theory goes that limited liquidity and slow news flow means there will be fewer bids for equities until most market participants return to their desks.
Using the Macrobond Investment strategy function, we examined the returns since 1990 for a hypothetical investor that exited the markets between May and October each year. We applied this test to the S&P 500 and the Euro Stoxx 50.
“Sell in May and go away” allegedly dates to the old-time London markets. If this strategy ever paid off on Wall Street, our chart suggests that it hasn’t since at least 1990. But in the EU, taking more time off isn’t just a cultural tradition; it can be profitable too.
Assessing country-by-country recession in the EU
This table measures quarter-on-quarter economic growth for the 27 nations in the European Union. Green means expansion; red means contraction. And a standard definition of recession is two consecutive quarters of negative growth.
As first-quarter 2023 figures trickle in, Lithuania has entered recession, joining Finland, Estonia and Hungary. Interestingly, some nations have already rebounded from recessions in 2022, such as the Czech Republic and Latvia.
Will more nations start flashing red as the ECB continues to tighten monetary policy? Christine Lagarde, who raised rates yesterday, signaled that there may be "more ground to cover" to control inflation.
Hedge funds are taking a strongly negative view on Treasuries
This chart tracks bets by hedge funds with regards to 10-year Treasuries, as reported to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. They have steadily built up a record net short position, even after 2022 was a historically catastrophic year for bonds and 10-year yields have stayed below last year’s peak (as the second panel shows).
As investors debate prospects for a Federal Reserve “pivot,” rate cuts and recession, some hedge funds may be staking out an unambiguous view: Treasury yields will stay high.
As Bloomberg News recently noted, the short position may be also related to so-called basis trades, when hedge funds buy cash Treasuries and short the underlying futures.
Saudi Arabia’s more diversified economy
Saudi Arabia recorded the highest GDP growth among G-20 nations in 2022. Surging oil prices in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine obviously helped, but by at least one metric, the nation has made progress diversifying its economy over the years.
Our chart breaks down the contributions to the year-on-year GDP growth rate in current prices by different sectors.
The blue bars represent net exports. This is where the positive effect of higher oil prices can be seen. But the strong performance of the orange bars in recent quarters is also notable. This includes private consumption and private investment.
With growth expected to slow in 2023 as crude prices stabilise at lower levels, these non-oil activities are expected to support the economy.
Global currency reserves and the de-dollarisation debate
The “de-dollarisation” debate is in the news.
“Why can’t we do trade based on our own currencies?” Brazilian President Lula da Silva recently remarked. China has been promoting the use of the renminbi in settling cross-border trade. Some nations view US sanctions against nations like Russia as “weaponising” the dollar, given the global reserve currency is so crucial for paying oil import bills.
By at least one measure, reliance on the dollar has been steadily declining: its share of global foreign-exchange reserves held by central banks. As our chart of IMF data shows, the dollar remains by far the main currency of choice, but its share has dropped to 58 percent from 70 percent over the past 20 years.
Holdings of Chinese yuan have been increasing from a tiny base, and now stand at 3 percent.
The euro’s share grew in the 2000s before retreating; it’s back at about 20 percent. The “other” category, including Australian, Canadian, South Korean and Scandinavian currencies, is also gradually inching higher. IMF economists posit that these currencies are considered to be “safe” but offer higher returns than the greenback.
The dollar share of SWIFT transactions remains stubbornly high
Dollar reserves might be falling at central banks, but the greenback’s share of international transactions has barely budged.
The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) is the messaging network that executes worldwide payments for banks. This chart tracks different currencies’ share of global SWIFT payments over time.
The dollar accounts for 40 percent of the value of transactions, about the same as a decade ago. The euro and pound have seen their proportions shrink. Starting from a low base, China’s renminbi grabbed an increasing share in the mid-2010s, but that trend has leveled off.
A high-profile recent impasse shows how sticky the greenback is – even for nations hostile to the US. Russia has long counted on India as a key market for its military equipment, but New Delhi risks running afoul of US sanctions if it pays Moscow in dollars. The Russians are refusing to pay in rupees, citing depreciation against the ruble.
European banks face TLTRO repayments at a stressful moment
For European banks, a pandemic-era rescue bill is coming due at a time that might prove inconvenient.
As our chart shows, analysts surveyed by the ECB expect lenders to start stepping up repayment of the central bank’s program of targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTRO). Final repayments are due in December 2024.
TLTROs were launched to support lending in the aftermath of the debt crisis in 2014. After their revival in 2020 – charted in the second panel – they became the ECB’s largest-ever infusion of liquidity.
TLTROs offered longer-term loans to banks at a favourable cost, and helped banks exceed liquidity requirements, but the most attractive terms of the program ended in June 2022.
As our chart shows, after further ECB changes in October, voluntary repayments initially accelerated, but then flatlined. The most recent ECB survey was in February, and systemic stress has worsened since then amid high-profile bank failures.
Banks must balance preserving their liquidity, tapping more expensive sources of funding and repaying their central bank.
European CPI scenarios and the base effect
With at least one more rate increase expected from the ECB, stubbornly high inflation remains in focus. New figures are expected next week.
This chart shows different scenarios for year-on-year growth in the core consumer price index for the eurozone, which excludes food and energy prices. While headline CPI has started to slow, core CPI is still accelerating in many regions.
One phenomenon worth watching is the base effect. This refers to volatility in the CPI 12 months earlier (the base month) when making a year-on-year comparison of inflation rates. Put another way, month-by-month price trends are important, but it’s worth being mindful of an outsized surge or drop a year earlier. And we are more than a year into the era of elevated inflation.
As our chart indicates, even steady core CPI growth of 0.25 percent month-over-month will mean a long-term slowdown in the year-over-year figures. And looking closely, even a 1 percent increase for April will result in a falling year-on-year trend – due to the base effect a year earlier.
The unleashed Chinese consumer is splashing out on jewelry and cars
The Chinese consumer is spending again. Last week, we charted the services rebound after the nation reopened its economy. This week, we show how sales of goods in different sectors have rallied from locked-down doldrums.
In March, China reported 10.6 percent year-on-year growth in retail sales of consumer goods. Jewelry stands out, surging 37 percent. Automobiles and clothing both jumped over 10 percent.
A few categories are still stagnating, with home décor and household appliances in negative territory. This may well be related to the struggling real estate market.
Economic and inflation surprises are bullish for China and hawkish for Britain
With the release of every economic data point, markets compare the figure to analysts’ expectations and react accordingly.
Citigroup maintains an economic and inflation surprise index, which we have charted to show how various nations are faring.
There are four quadrants. The “stagflation surprise” quadrant of higher-than-expected inflation and disappointing growth includes New Zealand and Sweden, whose woes we examined last month.
Given the gloomy news flow in the UK, Britons might be surprised to learn that they are experiencing the greatest “hawkish surprise.” The worst inflation in the group is combined with GDP figures that were recently revised upward.
China is in the sweet spot. Growth is surging after the country’s great reopening, while it appears that slack in the labour market has kept inflation in check.
There are no “dovish surprises” of weak growth and tumbling inflation to be seen yet, even though economists forecasting a central bank “pivot” certainly expect nations to start moving into that quadrant.
US small businesses are worried about access to credit
This chart tracks a survey of sentiment from the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB). After an unprecedented tightening cycle and last month’s sudden bank failures, US small businesses are concerned about a credit crunch.
The top panel charts small businesses’ near-term expectations about credit conditions, as measured by the NFIB. We’ve inverted the Y axis, so a higher reading represents greater negativity.
Pushing this survey data forward by a year shows its power as a leading indicator when compared with three decades of US bankruptcy filings. With small businesses expecting tighter credit, this correlation suggests business failures may pick up from the multi-decade low that has lingered post-pandemic.
The second panel indicates further cause for concern: the NFIB survey shows that respondents remain heavily pessimistic about the six-month outlook for business conditions.
Visualising the recent history of oil prices
In the wake of the surprise production cut by OPEC+, and a price spike that now appears to have been short-lived, what constitutes a "normal" oil price?
Our chart analyses inflation-adjusted Brent crude prices per barrel over the past 15 years. It’s also a period that has seen active moves by Saudi Arabia and its OPEC partners to shift the price environment for various geopolitical, revenue and market-share goals. (Analysts have described 2014-16 and 2020 as periods where OPEC waged “price wars” against US shale producers and Russia, respectively. More recent Saudi production cuts have stirred tension with the Biden administration.)
This visualisation shows how prices have tended to cluster around two levels – roughly USD 70 and USD 140. For about 40 percent of the trading days in the past 15 years, oil was priced between USD 60 and USD 90; at the time of writing, the price was about USD 80.
Are we headed to that higher cluster? Our previous visualisation on whether OPEC+ nations are running deficits might be one to refresh for insights.
A services boom in China
Several months after China’s great reopening, the world’s second-biggest economy is outperforming analysts’ expectations. Real GDP grew at a year-on-year pace of 4.5 percent in the first quarter, indicating that the nation’s 5 percent annual target is within reach.
We have previously analysed the effect of loosened Covid-19 restrictions in China using “soft” data like international flights and box-office revenue. This chart shows how reopening has translated into hard numbers.
Services, the orange part of the bars in the chart, accounted for almost 70 percent of quarterly growth, driven by consumer spending.
Copper stockpiles are depleting
China’s great reopening is also making its presence felt in the metals market. Citing the rebound in Chinese demand, trading giant Trafigura recently forecast record-breaking copper prices this year.
This chart compares the London Metal Exchange’s data on copper inventories in 2023 to the month-on-month trends in the most recent calendar years – showing just how low stockpiles are, and hence why surprisingly strong Chinese demand is having such an effect. In fact, LME copper stockpiles are at their lowest since 2005.
Another factor that has constrained supplies of the metal is unrest in Peru, a major producer. Local miners had been left with surging inventory, unable to move it to seaports.
Housing drives euro zone disinflation amid stubbornly pricey food
Stubbornly high inflation in the UK recently surprised markets, but peak inflation seems to be firmly in the rearview mirror for the eurozone – even if the ECB’s 2 percent target still seems far away.
In March, the bloc’s consumer price index rose 6. 9 percent year-on-year; that’s down from the record 10.6 percent pace in October.
This chart breaks down contributions to this trend. A slowdown in housing costs was the biggest factor, accounting for a 3.3 percentage point decline from the October peak. Transport costs are also on the way down. Food, meanwhile, is still getting more expensive.
US rent increases break from the trend
The US rental market is showing signs of weakness. We’re seeing a broad slowdown across the nation, rather than sharp adjustments in select markets.
This top panel in this chart tracks the share of the nation’s metro areas that are experiencing month-on-month rent hikes. A year ago, almost 90 percent of cities were reporting increasing rents.
That number has been gradually deflating and now stands at 60 percent – breaking from the pre-pandemic trend line.
The breadth of rent increases can also be considered a leading indicator for trends in nationwide owner's equivalent rent (OER), which we see in the second panel.
OER is used by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as a component of overall CPI. It measures rental markets by asking property owners to estimate the income they think they could get from a tenant.
Turkish gas production begins amid expensive foreign dependency
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is facing a tight race for re-election on May 14. He could be hoping that a historic Black Sea gas discovery, which starts delivery this month, will give him more economic wiggle room.
As our chart shows, Turkey is heavily dependent on imported energy – especially natural gas from Russia. Prices for those gas shipments were surging even before the energy price shock that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
With inflation running above 50 percent, the Sakarya project might help Erdogan fulfil his promise to cut consumers’ gas bills. It could also provide some relief for a key economic vulnerability: Turkey’s current-account deficit, which recently hit a record.
Stock picking when PMI contracts
With an end to Fed rate hikes not quite in sight, stock investors might be turning their thoughts to a sectoral rotation.
One leading indicator pointing towards recession is the Institute for Supply Management’s purchasing managers index (PMI), which surveys manufacturing executives. Readings below 50 indicate economic activity is contracting, and the PMI figure for March worsened to 46.3. That’s the fifth straight month of contraction.
We measured 40 years of PMI “regimes,” tracking how different sectors in the S&P 500 performed when the indicator was expanding, slowing, contracting or rebounding.
Health care stocks were the clear winners during times of contraction; real estate and energy fared worst. It’s notable that tech stocks were among the best performers in any environment, including the “rebound” scenario investors might be hoping for.
Emerging market debt burdens revisited
Last year, we discussed how the stronger dollar was problematic for emerging markets’ funding needs.
Global interest rates have kept on climbing since then. We have updated and enhanced an August 2022 chart of the biggest emerging-market nations that tracks their interest payments as a share of GDP (x axis), revenue (y axis) and reserves (bubble size). In all cases, that proportion is rising. The arrows show the direction of travel since 2019.
Some of these nations are facing their biggest bills for servicing foreign debts in a quarter of a century. India’s burden is the highest as measured by its share of government revenue; Brazil’s interest payments account for the biggest share of GDP, at 7 percent.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve remains drained as OPEC cuts back
President Biden might be wishing that he refilled the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) earlier this year. Since OPEC’s surprise production cut in early April, prices have climbed to a five-month high.
After Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago, the president ordered the SPR’s largest-ever sale, aiming to make trips to the gasoline pump less painful for American drivers.
The SPR fell to its lowest level since the 1980s – and has stayed outside its post-1990 range for all of 2023 so far, as our chart shows.
The Biden administration still plans to refill the SPR when it’s “advantageous to taxpayers,” Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said this week. It’s unclear when that will be. US international benchmarks are above USD 80 a barrel, compared with about USD 70 a month ago – a price where the administration had reportedly aimed to gas up.
13 years of ebbing IMF optimism
The International Monetary Fund recently sounded the alarm about the prospects for global growth, citing risks to the financial system. What might be surprising is that the institution has steadily whittled down its outlook ever since the global financial crisis.
Our chart displays IMF global GDP growth forecasts since 2008 as grey lines starting from the date they were released. The trajectories usually called for an increase from the then-current level.
The IMF predicts global economic expansion at an average rate of about 3 percent over the next five years. That’s well below the average 3.8 percent over the past two decades, and the weakest projection for medium-term growth since 1990.
While decades of globalisation have pulled hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, increasing economic fragmentation, geopolitical tensions and higher borrowing costs are clouding the outlook.
A unique case of European hyper deflation in Norway
Most recent macroeconomic narratives consider whether inflation is slowing or not. In Norway, one measure of prices is showing not just outright deflation, but the steepest decline ever.
The producer price index (PPI) is a measure of the average change in prices that an economy’s domestic producers receive for their output. It’s often considered a leading indicator for consumer price inflation.
Norwegian PPI fell an unprecedented 21.9 percent year-on-year in March. Of course, there’s a catch: Norway’s energy-oriented economy. Norwegian gas became crucial for Europe’s energy needs after Russia invaded Ukraine and flows from the Nord Stream pipeline ground to a halt. Gas prices soared, but LNG boats and a warm winter came to the rescue. Prices are down more than 80 percent from their August peak.
If we exclude energy, Norway looks a lot more like the rest of the developed world – with PPI rising more than 11 percent.
Spain might be an optimistic leading indicator for European inflation
At least one economy in Europe is showing a pronounced drop in consumer prices: Spain. CPI growth has retreated to 3.3 percent after peaking above 10 percent last autumn.
That’s optimistic for the rest of the EU because the Iberian nation has been an interesting leading indicator over the past three years, as our chart shows.
The Spanish CPI line tracks the EU line quite closely when it’s pushed forward three months. That could be because Spain moved more quickly to apply and phase out consumer subsidies during the pandemic.
To be sure, Spanish “core” inflation – which strips out food and that plunging natural-gas price – remains fodder for inflation hawks, standing at 7.5 percent.
Keeping an eye out for another credit crunch in Europe
As concerns about a recession mount, it’s worth watching bank lending to companies in Europe. With securitisation playing a much smaller role than it does in the US, bank loans are a key conduit of credit – and monetary policy – to the real economy.
Our chart tracks the three-month cumulative lending flow to non-financial corporations. The ECB’s rapid rate hikes have pushed this indicator into negative territory: i.e., credit is being cut back.
The historic precedents are ominous. Bank loans shrank during the 2008-09 global financial crisis, and this indicator stayed in negative territory for years after the European debt crisis. (The shaded areas indicate recessions.)
The quite different trend during the pandemic recession is notable. As the economy ground to a halt with little warning, companies rushed to tap their credit facilities as authorities offered historic levels of support to the financial system.
Stocks at the midway point for presidential cycles
As President Biden signals that he plans to run for re-election, it’s worth revisiting history to assess how the S&P 500 typically behaves in the second half of a presidential term.
The S&P 500 is barely higher since Biden took office, but it roughly tracked the historic trend of a mid-term lull last year. History would suggest a rebound is overdue.
But with stress in the financial system, recession worries lingering and the Fed still tightening, the president might have to hope the bulls make a return in 2024.