Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • In this week's Letter, we trace how an energy shock and a resilient AI upcycle shaped Asia through the first half of 2026 and weigh the risks that may define the second. The year opened hopeful on AI, though some feared stretched valuations, before the US-Iran conflict and a closed Strait of Hormuz shook the mood (chart 1). A later MoU eased energy prices and inflation fears, yet valuations largely held on AI optimism, despite bouts of reassessment. The oil surge hit import-reliant emerging Asia hardest, leaving India, Thailand and the Philippines doubly exposed through their Middle East sourcing (chart 2). Pass-through inflation, subsidies that some governments later pared back, and currency pressure followed, though resuming Strait traffic should ease these strains. Rising inflation then boxed in policymakers, straining already-stretched fiscal positions and limiting more pro-growth monetary policy stances in some economies (chart 3). Our latest Blue Chip survey found a slim majority reassessed the risk balance after oil fell, though the shifts stayed mild versus the June survey (chart 4). Most still rank upside inflation risk above downside employment risk, even as a slightly larger share now see the balance as more even. AI remains the region's key offset, with Taiwan and South Korea riding a sharp rise in memory and chip exports (chart 5). Malaysia and Thailand instead draw data centre FDI, so Asia gains from the buildout phase rather than the West's hoped-for productivity gains. We close on an uncertain second half, where a possible Super El Niño could revive food-driven inflation even as energy pressures fade (chart 6). Beyond that, an AI reassessment, fresh geopolitical flashpoints, trade tensions and the US midterms could each reshape the outlook.

    The year thus far We began the year on a relatively hopeful note, buoyed by AI optimism and market valuations that reflected it, although some investors worried that valuations had become overstretched. The geopolitical mood shifted quickly in early January, however, when US military forces captured former Venezuelan leader Maduro, though the event did little to move markets (chart 1). A far greater shock came when the US-Iran conflict erupted in late February, closing the Strait of Hormuz and dealing a negative blow to global energy supplies. More recently, the US and Iran have reached a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at ceasing hostilities and resuming trade flows through the Strait. This has allowed energy prices to ease, softening policymakers' concerns about energy-driven inflation. Even so, equity valuations have largely remained underpinned by AI optimism, albeit with interim bouts of reassessment and price retracement. This drew on repeated reports of strong growth along the AI supply chain, and on signs that supply could not keep pace with demand. This continued even as AI models with leapfrogging capabilities reached the public. At several points, the US government stepped in to rein in public access to some models, given security concerns about such immense capabilities falling into the wrong hands.

  • Global financial markets have had a more settled feel this week, reflecting the continued unwinding of the geopolitical risk premium that had built up during the worst of the US-Iran conflict. Oil prices have fallen further, equity markets have been broadly supported, and incoming inflation data — notably the euro area’s June flash CPI estimate — have come in below expectations. The US holiday-shortened week ahead, with Independence Day on Friday, is likely to keep volumes thin and activity subdued. The bigger picture, however, remains one of tension between a more benign near-term inflation trajectory and central banks that may not yet be ready to stand down. In the charts below we look first at what the latest Blue Chip Financial Forecasts (BCFF) survey reveals about the expected change in and timing of policy rates across the major economies (charts 1 and 2), then at the divergence between headline and core inflation across the advanced economies (chart 3), and at what euro area consumers are more specifically expecting about inflation in the period ahead (chart 4). We turn next to Japan and the yen’s slide this week to 40-year lows (chart 5), and finally to the BCFF survey’s special questions on artificial intelligence and asset valuations (chart 6).

    • U.S. nonfarm payrolls increased 57,000 in June with meaningful downward revisions to both April and May.
    • The market consensus looked for a 115,000 increase.
    • The unemployment rate edged down to 4.2% from 4.3%, due mostly to a large decrease in the labor force.
    • Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% m/m (3.5% y/y), in line with expectations.
  • Unemployment rates in the European Monetary Union (EMU) were steady in May at 6.2%, the same level as in April, after April had fallen to 6.2% from 6.3%. The 6.2% reading is the lowest for the community since it was formed. Meanwhile, for the larger community, the EU, the unemployment rate has stabilized at 5.9%, the same as in April, again, a tick lower than it was in March. This 5.9% reading is a tick above the historic low for the European Union (EU). In both cases, the performance of these two economic conglomerations is quite excellent.

    Monthly The table looks at 12 of the most senior members of the monetary union, including an observation for the United Kingdom based on its claimant-count unemployment rate, presented at the bottom of the table. In May, the monetary union saw 4 of 12 members in the table with lower unemployment rates than they had in April. In April, five members had lower unemployment rates than in March. In March, seven members had lower unemployment rates than they posted in February. The progression to lower unemployment rates has slowed based on monthly data.

    Sequentially Looking at changes in the unemployment rates over broader sequential periods—three months, six months, and 12 months—6 out of 12 reporters have lower unemployment rates over three months; 7 have lower unemployment rates over six months; only 4 report unemployment rates that are lower over 12 months. The broader periods for comparison show changes in the unemployment rates that report more declines over the shorter and more recent periods compared to the longer/older periods. This is not the same trend leaning that we get from the last three months of data. It'll be good to watch these developments in the coming months to see if the tendency to lower unemployment rates is slowing or whether dropping unemployment is continuing in force.

    Rankings The ranking of unemployment rates since 1990 finds only three of these 12 monetary union members with unemployment rates above their medians. Those are Luxembourg, with a 98.2 percentile standing, Finland with an 81.9 percentile standing, and Austria with a 76.6 percentile standing. Italy, on the other hand, is reporting the lowest unemployment rate that it has seen during this period. The Greek unemployment rate has been this low or lower only about 3% of the time, while in Spain the unemployment rate has been this low or lower 11% of the time. For Portugal, the unemployment ranking figure has been weaker 13% of the time. The monetary union continues to report excellent labor market results even though economic growth has been relatively disappointing.

    • ISM Mfg. PMI down slightly to 53.3 in June; sixth straight month above 50.
    • Production (52.2) expands for the eighth consecutive mth.; new orders (56.0) for the sixth successive mth.
    • Employment (49.7) contracts for the 33rd straight mth.; at the slowest contraction pace since Jan. ’25.
    • Prices Index (73.0) at a four-month low, still indicating prices rising for the 21st consecutive mth.
    • Exports (48.5) contract for the third time in four mths.; imports (52.9) continue to grow.
    • Building activity in the US was firm in 2023 and 2024, but it has lost ground since then.
    • Government-related construction and private residential building have been little changed in the past year or so.
    • Private nonresidential construction has been notably weak, despite robust activity in the building of data centers.
  • The manufacturing PMI values for June showed more worsening than improving, with 10 of 18 reporters showing conditions unchanged or getting worse on a month-to-month basis. However, taking into account the size of the changes across the various reporters, the median PMI rating for manufacturing in June improved to 51.4, an increase of 0.5 points from the month before. The month-to-month deterioration is relatively broad; however, it's also relatively mixed, and when taking the size of the changes into account, there's actually a monthly improvement.

    The chart shows that manufacturing has been undergoing improvements generally since late last year, although in the last few months, there has been a topping, a capping, and in some cases a backtracking from the recent high readings. That action reflects the onset of hostilities between the United States and Iran and the on-again, off-again situation with the Strait of Hormuz being open or closed.

    Over three months compared to six months ago, the average readings show deterioration in only 5 of 18 reporters. This clearly reflects what we see in the chart, which is a recent improvement over three months compared to six months. The next comparison of 6-month averages to 12-month averages finds that only four reporters are worse off over six months than they were over 12 months. Those four are Mexico, India, Indonesia, and Vietnam. Over 12 months compared to 12 months ago, conditions are better everywhere except in India.

    In addition, we can evaluate the manufacturing performance by ranking the current month's observation in a queue of data back to January 2022, a period of about 4½ years. Viewed over that span, only four countries have readings in June below their period medians. Those are Indonesia, India, Turkey, and Russia. All the rest have readings above the 50th percentile, putting them above their historic medians. Japan has an exceptionally strong reading in June relative to its history, posting a 95.4 percentile standing. Mexico, China, Malaysia, and Taiwan also post strong standings, in their 80th percentile.

    The median queue standing for the entire group is a 69.2 percentile standing, which is still quite strong. Other summary measures of sequential diffusion show that the proportion of reporters improving over 12 months is 94.4%, compared to 72.2% over 6 months and 61.1% over 3 months. The breadth of this improvement is shrinking over the near-term horizons; however, the tendency for improvement is unmistakable.

    Average readings for certain groups at the bottom of the table show that the United States, the United Kingdom, EMU countries, Canada, and Japan, on an unweighted basis, have steady improvements in place from 12 months to six months to three months, with a one-month reading even stronger. The BRIC countries have readings that are marginally stronger but are staying in a tight low range around 50.8 to 51.5. The Asian average shows an improvement from 12 months to 6 months and then backtracking, with the current 3-month diffusion values just slightly above 51, around 51.5.

    The global economy has shown some significant improvement recently in the manufacturing sector, and this has occurred despite the ongoing war in Ukraine and stepped-up hostilities involving Iran, including the on-again, off-again closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Oil prices have spiked and have since come down substantially. However, the outlook for peace remains clouded as both sides continue to talk positively about an agreement and a ceasefire, then turn around and violate near-term conditions they have set. This makes it very difficult to handicap the future.

    • Headline up 0.6 pts. to 91.2 in June, below expectations; fourth m/m increase in five mths.
    • Present Situation Index down 3.0 pts. to 116.4, lowest since Feb. ’21.
    • Expectations Index up 3.0 pts. to 74.4, a six-month high.
    • Consumers less optimistic about current business & labor market conditions; more upbeat about future business & financial conditions.
    • Inflation expectations down to 6.0%, lowest since Feb., as lower oil prices in recent weeks eased consumer inflation fears.