Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • In our Letter this week, we examine the ongoing Iran war through an Asian lens. Geopolitical uncertainty and crude oil prices have remained elevated (chart 1), despite early reports concerning the potential for a brief conflict that tempered investor caution. Attention has now centred on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant share of global oil typically flows. With shipments now nearly halted (chart 2), much of the world’s energy flow has effectively stalled. While these developments have broad global implications, their impact on Asian economies is more nuanced. This partly reflects differences in energy mixes across the region (chart 3), as well as the historical relationship between oil prices and energy inflation (chart 4). Further compounding the challenges faced by Asian oil importers are currency effects: a broader risk-off turn in markets has weighed on several Asian currencies (chart 5), raising the local-currency cost of energy imports. Amid these pressures, several regional central banks are also set to decide on policy this week (chart 6), alongside major Western counterparts such as the Federal Reserve. Near-term rate cut expectations have been pushed back in many cases amid renewed inflation concerns, while in some Asian economies markets are even pricing in the possibility of further rate hikes.

    The Iran war Two weeks in, the Iran war continues with no clear end in sight. Crude oil prices and geopolitical risk therefore remain elevated, as shown in chart 1, despite earlier news that had briefly tempered investors’ heightened caution. Even reports that the 32 members of the International Energy Agency are set to release around 400 million barrels in emergency reserves have done little to curb the surge in crude prices. Latest reports indicate that reserves for Asia will be released immediately, while supplies for Europe and the Americas will only become available from the end of March. Meanwhile, uncertainty surrounding the Strait of Hormuz continues to underpin elevated prices. The strait—currently blocked by Iran—handles roughly 20% of global oil flows. Iran has recently indicated that it may allow ships from certain countries to transit the waterway, though the situation remains fluid.

    • Consumer spending and business investment in structures accounted for most of the adjustment.
    • Although growth was slow, the results were not alarming.
    • The inflation rate for personal consumption expenditures remains uncomfortably high.
    • Solid income growth, but cautious spending by households.
    • Openings rose 6.0% m/m to 6.946 million, the highest reading in three months.
    • Hiring edged up 0.4% m/m to 5.294 million, its highest level since last June.
    • Separations fell 1.9% m/m to 5.105 million with declines in both Quits and Layoffs.
    • Headline orders -0.04% (+10.3% y/y) in Jan.; -0.9% (+10.6% y/y) in Dec.
    • Defense aircraft orders -23.7% m/m in Jan. vs. +11.9% in Dec.; nondefense aircraft & parts +3.8% vs. -22.8%.
    • Transportation orders -0.9%, third m/m fall in four mths.; orders ex transportation +0.4%, ninth straight m/m rise.
    • Core capital goods shipments -0.1% following four consecutive m/m gains.
    • Durable goods shipments +0.6%; unfilled orders +0.8%; inventories +0.2%.
  • Broad and severe weakness in European production: industrial production data for the monetary union turned decidedly sour in January. All major production categories showed declines in January, including the headline series for production excluding construction and manufacturing output. There were also drops across the major manufacturing sectors—consumer goods, intermediate goods, and capital goods—as well as in both of the consumer sub categories of durable goods and nondurable goods. January was a really tough month for the industrial sector and the European monetary union.

    Sequential output weakness as well: Output is not only falling in every category in January—and for two months in a row—but the sequential growth rates over 12 months, six months, and three months also show decelerations present for all of these categories of output except capital goods. That means the six-month growth rate is weaker than the 12-month growth rate, and the three-month growth rate is weaker than the six-month growth rate for six of seven of these categories—the exception is capital goods. And capital goods are a minor exception with the growth over three months only slightly stronger than over six months, and at that it's still a negative growth rate. It shows a decline in output, just a slower decline. There is no silver lining here, just clouds and rain.

    Quarter to date and more: As if that's not enough, these are output data for January so we can calculate quarter-to-date growth rates in the first quarter. On that basis, all seven of these categories show output declining, and output is declining in all seven of these categories at a double-digit pace! In addition, when we step back to compare growth rates over the last year with previous 12-month growth rates back to April 2006, a 20-year horizon, we find that all the growth rates in the table lie below their median rates of growth for this previous twenty-year span. Capital goods fare the best, with a percentile standing of its growth rate at its nearly 48th percentile, just slightly below its median, which lies at a ranking of 50%. The growth rates for consumer nondurables, for example, have had output growth weaker during this period, only 1.7% of the time. Consumer goods output has been weaker, only 3.8% of the time. Manufacturing output is in the bottom quartile among historically ranked growth rates. These are extremely bad and consistently poor rankings for industrial growth.

    The table also offers up country-by-county data for January. Looking just at monetary union members, seven of twelve show output declines in January, but that compares to December, which was a strong month with only three of those members showing output declines. However, a month earlier, in November, eight monetary union members had shown output declines. There are sequential output declines reported by Germany, Spain, and Ireland over the last twelve-to-six-to-three months. Only Malta and Greece show output trends that are accelerating, and of course, these are two of the smaller monetary union countries. Seven monetary union countries show quarter-to-date output is declining early in this first quarter. Among the five countries showing output increasing, two of them showed double-digit growth rates in the new quarter and those two again are Malta and Greece. For the countries overall, only five of twelve have queue percentile standings of their earlier growth rates that are above their historic medians for the last 20 years. That list of five includes France, Malta, Greece, Portugal, and Austria.

    The industrial data for Europe in January are decidedly downbeat and concerning. These numbers are being reported before hostilities in the Middle East began to ramp up and clearly before oil prices spurted higher. The European manufacturing sector is not digging itself out of the hole it fell into after COVID and the invasion of Ukraine. And after showing a hint of recovery, it now appears to be deep in the morass of economic weakness.

    • The deficit in goods and services narrowed to $54.5 billion in January from $72.9 billion in December
    • Exports rebounded, rising 5.5% m/m in January after a 1.6% m/m decline in December.
    • However, 60% of the exported goods rebound was in nonmonetary gold and other precious metals.
    • Imports edged down 0.7% m/m following a 3.5% monthly jump in December.
    • The goods deficit narrowed to $81.8 billion while the services surplus widened slightly to $27.3 billion.
    • Housing starts +7.2% (+9.5% y/y) to 1.487 mil. in Jan.; largest of three straight m/m gains.
    • Multi-family starts at highest level since May ’23; single-family starts down for the first time in four mths.
    • Starts m/m up in the Northeast (+47.4%) and South (+11.4%), but down in the Midwest (-10.8%) and West (-7.5%).
    • Building permits at a five-month low, w/ declines in both single-family and multi-family permits.