16 December 2024
Chris Scicluna; Emily Nicol
- The Fed looks set to cut rates by 25bps on Wednesday to take the FFR target range to 4.25-4.50%; but the FOMC’s updated dot-plot of members’ rate projections for coming years, as well as its policy statement and Chair Powell’s commentary, will be scrutinised for further signs that it will be more cautious in easing policy in 2025 and beyond.
- While this morning’s UK flash PMIs suggested that economic activity continues to flatline, the Bank of England is still widely expected to leave Bank Rate unchanged at 4.75% (Thursday) as the MPC’s concerns about inflation persistence might be maintained by data showing still-elevated wage growth (tomorrow) and a pickup in the headline CPI rate to around 2½%Y/Y (Wednesday) in part due to unfavourable base effects.
- Although recent Japanese economic data, such as last week’s Tankan survey results, appear consistent with a further rate hike, media reports suggest that the BoJ is in no hurry to tighten, and so it is currently expected to leave its policy rate unchanged at 0.25% (Thursday); nevertheless, inflation data (Friday) will likely report a pickup further above the 2.0% target in the headline and core rates alike, maintaining market expectations that monetary policy will be tightened in the New Year.
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09 December 2024
Chris Scicluna; Emily Nicol
- After Japanese GDP growth in Q3 was revised up today to a respectable 1.2%Q/Q annualised, the BoJ and investors alike will closely watch its quarterly Tankan business survey results (Friday) for additional signs that business conditions are ripe for another rate hike, either next week or in January.
- After a UK labour market survey today reported the steepest decline in job vacancies since 2020, October’s GDP data (Friday) will likely show only a very modest uptick in economic output to suggest no material improvement in the underlying trend in Q4 after growth slowed to just 0.1%Q/Q in Q3; the GfK confidence survey (also Friday) similarly seems likely to suggest that consumers are lacking festive cheer.
- Data this morning showed that Chinese CPI inflation unexpectedly slowed to just 0.2%Y/Y in November, with producer prices down a marked 2.5%Y/Y, to underscore that deflationary risks remain elevated; in response, in a shift from recent years, China’s Politburo committed to a “moderately loose” monetary policy and “more proactive” fiscal policy in 2025. November goods trade figures (tomorrow) will flag China’s overreliance on exports for driving growth, with soft imports tallying with ongoing domestic demand weakness.
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