Friday , May 10 2024
Home / Tag Archives: Macroview (page 112)

Tag Archives: Macroview

Euro area growth slowed as expected in Q2

Growth in the euro area fell to 0.3% in the second quarter from 0.6% in the first. Nevertheless, leading indicators point to post-Brexit resilience and we are leaving our full-year forecast unchanged Euro area real GDP expanded by 0.3% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) in the second quarter (1.2% q-o-q annualised, 1.6% year-on-year), in line with expectations and our forecast. This compares with GDP growth of 0.6% q-o-q in the first quarter.According to preliminary estimates by country, growth in...

Read More »

BOJ fails to meet expectations on easing

Macroview Further action may come once the BOJ has fully reviewed the effectiveness of existing policies, but for now the focus is turning to the latest fiscal package On 29 July, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) announced that it would keep the current pace of monetary base expansion unchanged at JPY80 trillion per year and left the policy interest rate unchanged at -0.1%.Although the central bank did announce a doubling of its purchases of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and an expansion of its...

Read More »

Bund yield forecast reduced in response to heightened volatility

Macroview The German 10-year Bund yield should rise only slightly from its current negative level. Peripheral bond spreads over Bunds should remain volatile. The financial markets’ reaction to the UK's Brexit referendum, together with the change in our economic scenarios as a result of UK voters’ decision to leave the European Union, are leading us to change our forecast for euro area bonds, particularly our forecasts for the German 10-year Bund and for yield spreads over Bunds for...

Read More »

Business activity resilient in France and Germany, but marked downturn in the UK

The flash PMI for the euro area was better than expected in July, although some sub-indexes pointed ahead to a deceleration in the rate of expansion. PMI data indicate a contraction of activity in the UK. Today’s flash PMI surveys for the euro area were more resilient than expected. The euro area composite PMI index eased only marginally in July, from 53.1 to 52.9, according to Markit’s flash estimates. However, some forward-looking indicators point to weaker developments ahead. In the...

Read More »

ECB on hold, rendez-vous in September

Macroview Further policy stimulus and adjustments to its bond-buying programme remain on the agenda as the ECB strives to measure the impact of current uncertainties The ECB remained on hold at its 21 July policy meeting. The main conclusion to be drawn from the meeting was that more stimulus is on the table for September, when new staff forecasts will be available.The only unexpected bit of news was ECB chairman’s Mario Draghi’s apparent support for the idea of a public backstop for banks...

Read More »

US retail sales solid in June, very strong in Q2 overall

Macroview Upbeat consumer spending figures and other data mean we maintain our forecast of 2.5% GDP growth for the US in the second quarter. Core retail sales in the US increased by 0.5% month-on-month in June, above consensus expectations. Moreover, April and May numbers were revised up by a cumulative 0.1%. The result was that core retail sales grew by a very strong rate of 7.4% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) annualised in Q2 2016, much higher than the 2.8% rise seen in Q1.Together with auto...

Read More »

Chinese economy continues to rebalance

Chinese GDP slightly above expectations in Q2. We maintain our forecast of 6.5% growth this year. China’s GDP growth came in at 6.7% year-on-year in Q2 2016, unchanged from Q1 and slightly better than expectations. A detailed breakdown of the GDP number released on 15 July is still unavailable, but we can gain a better understanding of the state of the Chinese economy by looking at some other indicators that have been published recently.First, household consumption is becoming ever more...

Read More »

Pick-up in U.S. job creation in June masks slowdown in Q2 as a whole

Job creation, unemployment, and wage growth figures for June were a mixed bag. We maintain our expectation for one Fed rate hike this year. The US Labor Department’s employment report for June showed nonfarm payrolls rising by a strong 287,000 in June, well above consensus expectations. However, this followed a very weak number for May (11,000, revised down from 38,000). Job creation slowed noticeably in Q2 overall.Meanwhile, the unemployment rate bounced back from 4.7% in May to 4.9% in...

Read More »

Brexit to have limited impact on the Swiss economy in the short term

But in the medium to long term, Swiss growth will depend on the terms of the UK’s exit from the EU While it is outside the EU, Switzerland is not immune to external shocks such as Brexit. The transmission channels are multiple (direct trade exposure, financial markets, confidence effect, political agenda…). That said, while the Swiss economy is mainly an export economy, its exposure to the UK is limited. Exports of goods to the UK represent 6% of total Swiss exports, for example, and half...

Read More »

There’s life in Europe after Brexit—an early assessment

The effects of the UK referendum continue to reverberate throughout the euro area. But the ECB stands ready to steady nerves, and we believe Brexit could bring some benefit to the euro area. As a result of the Brexit vote, our in-house model points to a net drag on euro area GDP of around 0.50% over the next three years through direct trade and financial linkages. This is similar to the ECB’s own forecast. In addition, we have lowered our euro area GDP forecast to 1.5% in 2016 (from 1.8%)...

Read More »