Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • German orders, now available for April, show both domestic and foreign orders are sketching a herky-jerky path higher. The volatility is such that we can't be sure the momentum will remain higher, but for the time being, the present orders are oscillating around an upward trend. There is a particularly striking downward movement in domestic orders, with three sizeable month-to-month drops in the last four months. The drop in foreign orders, at 4.2% month-to-month, is sharp, but that follows two months of very strong gains—although they follow one month of a substantial drop. German orders are simply sketching out a very dissonant path—very hard to discern a trend.

    German orders show systemic sequential declines in domestic orders, an event that is offset by systematic sequential acceleration in foreign orders. The net result of total orders is an order slowdown over six months and four months that gives way to a sharp rise over three months.

    Sector sales, expressed also in real trend, show consumer durable goods sales and intermediate good sales both engaged in alternating behavior.

    Early in Q2, German orders show declines overall an in domestic orders that are only partly blunted by a sizeable rise in foreign orders. Sector sales show a real gain in manufacturing, pushed ahead by consumer durables and intermediate goods, against weakness in nondurables and in capital goods. The broad ranking of annual growth rates for sales and orders show abject ranking weakness for orders and all sales, with the sole exception of orders by foreigners—that series has a ranking above its median at the 60.7 percentile mark.

    To compare German industry with other key European sectors, we use the EU industrial confidence gauges. This shows Spain as the only country among Spain, Italy, Germany, and France, with an industrial sector ranking above the 50th percentile mark (above its median reading). All of the manufacturing readings have negative values in April; however, only Germany shows an advance in progression from 12 months to six months to three months.

    The industrial order report for April is weak, but there are undercurrents of uptrends embedded in the report. The month’s results and trends may be better than the current month’s topical readings suggest.

  • In this week’s Letter, we take stock of the latest Blue Chip Financial Forecast (BCFF) survey results and connect them with recent regional developments across Asia. Panellists have raised their policy rate forecasts relative to the pre–Middle East conflict baseline (chart 1), as inflation concerns intensify and several Asian central banks tighten policy (chart 2). Meanwhile, stronger US jobs data have strengthened the higher-for-longer rate narrative, tempering AI-driven equity gains in the US and Asia (chart 3).

    Turning to country specifics, the sharp rise in South Korean equities masks a more nuanced picture, where sustained foreign investor outflows have eventually weighed on the market and contributed to weakness in the South Korean won (chart 4). India has experienced a similar pattern, with a range of rupee supportive measures already introduced, although their effectiveness remains too early to assess (chart 5). Indonesia has likewise seen persistent foreign capital outflows alongside a weakening rupiah, with foreign participation in its government bond market declining to a worrying trickle (chart 6).

    Blue Chip Financial Forecast (BCFF) survey Looking at the latest Blue Chip Financial Forecast (BCFF) survey results, chart 1 shows that panellists have significantly revised upward their policy rate forecasts since the March survey (conducted at the end of February), reflecting the inflationary implications of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Such revisions are understandable, as the disruption to one of the world's most important oil shipping routes has constrained global oil supply. With supply reduced while demand remains broadly unchanged, oil prices have risen sharply, feeding through to higher inflation and increasing the likelihood of further monetary policy tightening, or at the very least, a slower pace of policy easing. Among the economies covered by the survey, panellists have revised up their policy rate expectations for Australia by the largest margin, followed by the United Kingdom and the euro area.

    • Nonfarm payrolls post their third consecutive firm advance.
    • Unemployment showed marginal improvement.
  • GDP growth in the European Monetary Union backtracked in the first quarter, falling by 0.9% at an annual rate after rising by 0.7% at an annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2025. The year-over-year growth rate from the monetary union also slowed sharply to 0.3%. The small positive gain in Q1 2026 comes after gains of over 1% in year-over-year calculations since the third quarter of 2024. The queue ranking of the year-on-year GDP growth rate, on data back to 1997, places the Q1 GDP result in its 21st percentile—roughly a lower one-fifth ranking.

    Among the 14 EMU member reporters of GDP data in the table, five countries experienced quarter-to-quarter declines in GDP in Q1 2026: France, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, and Austria. Ireland has some peculiar accounting issues because a number of multinational companies are headquartered there for tax reasons; this produced a decline in GDP at a 40% annual rate to dominate these results. And the sharp Irish decline in GDP has an outsized impact on the European Monetary Union GDP report itself. In contrast, among the individual reporting members, the median change in GDP in the first quarter was a 0.2% increase at an annual rate; both Portugal and the Netherlands experienced GDP increases of that magnitude.

    In addition to that, the fourth quarter of 2025 showed decelerations in GDP for six of these reporting monetary union members; however, GDP declined in only two of these members in the fourth quarter.

    Year-over-year data show GDP growth rates in the first quarter declining broadly in 11 of the 14 reporting members in this table. That compares to a slowdown reported by six member countries in the fourth quarter of 2025.

    The four largest monetary union members experienced a slowdown in GDP, with growth at 1% in the first quarter compared to 1.3% in the fourth quarter; that 1% growth rate is the same as in the third quarter of 2025. The rest of the monetary union saw a sharp decline as GDP contracted at a 5.7% annual rate, with the Irish data playing a big role in that for the rest of the monetary union. For the four largest EMU economies, GDP advanced by 0.9% in Q1 2026 on a year-over-year basis. Year-over-year changes show relatively steady growth in the four largest monetary union economies, with growth rates of 1% or 0.9% in each of the last four quarters, while the rest of the monetary union shows much stronger growth rates over the last four quarters, but for that group, growth rates have been generally decelerating. That process culminates in a decline of 1.2% for year-over-year GDP growth in Q1 2026 for the rest of the EMU.

    Over these last four quarters when the rest of the monetary union growth rates—apart from the four largest economies—showed steady slippage, Switzerland also showed a steady deceleration in GDP growth; so has the United Kingdom. Japan also has weakening growth over these last four quarters. However, the U.S. does not fall into that pattern, having maintained steady growth and then experienced a pickup in growth to 2.6% year-over-year in Q1 2026.

    Few show above-median growth Among the countries in the table, very few have GDP growth rates year-over-year that are above their medians on performance back to 1997. However, countries with queue standing above their 50th percentile for growth rates reflect that phenomenon; those countries are the U.S., Spain, Portugal, Italy, Luxembourg, Greece, and Denmark. Belgium, Ireland, Cyprus, and Switzerland have growth rates ranked below the 20th percentile in the queue ranking system. The median and year-over-year growth rate in the monetary union has a 30.4 percentile ranking, similar to Japan with a 36.4 percentile ranking for its year-over-year GDP. Growth metrics are showing some struggle, and the combined weight of the ongoing Ukraine war and the new effect of the Middles East conflict take their tolls.

  • The global macro backdrop continues to evolve in ways that would have surprised many investors at the start of the year. Expectations of widespread monetary easing have steadily receded as inflation has proven more persistent and economic activity more resilient than anticipated. The latest Blue Chip Financial Forecasts point to a growing bias towards policy tightening rather than loosening in several major economies (chart 1), while rising US job opening rates suggest labour demand remains firmer than expected (chart 2). At the same time, ongoing instability in the Middle East continues to generate supply-side inflation risks and lengthier delivery times (chart 3). There are, however, also reasons for optimism. Manufacturing activity appears to be finding some support from a reduction in effective tariff rates facing many major US trading partners (chart 4). More importantly, the AI investment boom continues to gather momentum. South Korea's semiconductor exports surged by an extraordinary 169% year-on-year in May, highlighting the strength of global demand for AI-related hardware (chart 5). Unsurprisingly, investors continue to direct capital towards those markets most exposed to these trends, with Taiwan and South Korea attracting substantial equity inflows (chart 6). The bottom line is that inflation concerns and higher-for-longer interest rates remain important risks, but they are increasingly being offset, for now, by a combination of improving economic conditions and one of the strongest technology-driven investment cycles in modern history.

    • Q1 output per hour growth was revised down to 0.3% q/q saar in the second estimate from 0.8% in the first, reflecting a downward revision to output.
    • However, longer-term productivity growth remained solidly well above trend.
    • Compensation growth was revised down meaningfully, resulting in a downward revision to unit labor cost growth to 1.8% from 2.3% previously.
    • Initial claims rose more than expected to 225k in the week ending May 30.
    • This is the largest weekly claims figure since February 7.
    • However, continuing claims continued to trend down, falling to 1.777 million in the week ending May 23 from 1.785 million in the previous week.
  • Retail sales in the euro area declined in volume terms in April, falling 0.4% on the month after rising 0.8% in March and falling 0.5% in February. Food and beverage volume recovered to post an expansion after two monthly declines.

    Sales trends slip: However, the headline for retail volume growth shows that there has been steady slippage, with growth over 12 months weaker than it was over the previous 12 months, growth over six months at a weaker pace than it was over 12 months, and growth over three months posting an outright decline compared to a gain over six months. The highlighted red background in the table shows this string of continuous slowing that marks decelerating retail spending in the euro area as of April. In the quarter to date, retail sales volumes are declining at a 0.2% annual rate—a very slight contraction but a net reduction in sales volume, nonetheless, to start the second quarter.

    Contrarian strength in vehicle demand: Motor vehicle registrations pulled back in April after some strong gains in earlier months. Motor vehicle registrations are accelerating as the growth rate rises from 12 months to six months to three months; growth actually explodes over three months, rising at a 52.4% annualized rate. With this strength, naturally, motor vehicle registrations are logging strong growth at the beginning of this new quarter, rising at a 33.6% annual rate.

    Despite the strength in motor vehicle registrations, registrations are still a lot lower in comparison to January 2020. They have averaged a decline of 1.2% per year over this period. Since January 2020, just before COVID struck, retail sales in the euro area have risen by 6.7%, implying an average annual growth rate of 1% per year. This has generally been a lethargic period for retail sales.

    Sales trends by country Looking at the individual countries in the table, we chronicle developments for EMU members Germany and the Netherlands, EU member Denmark, and Northern European countries Norway and Sweden, plus former EU member the United Kingdom. We see that all of these countries have had a long period of weak growth going back to January 2020. Among these countries, only Denmark and the Netherlands have averaged retail volume growth of over 1% for this date-span; Denmark averages 1.5% per year, and the Netherlands averages 1.3%. Sweden and Norway’s trends average 0.8% and 0.7% growth per year back to January 2020. Germany posted a compounded annual increase of only 0.6% annually, while in the U.K., in the wake of the problems that COVID and Brexit created, saw its retail sales volumes decline annually by 0.4%, marking a 2.2 percentage point decline in retail sales since January 2020. It has been a weak environment for retailing.

    Recent sales performance: Up-to-date observations for April show declines in retail sales volume in Germany, Denmark, and the U.K., with flat sales in Sweden. Norway logs an increase of 0.3% month-to-month, and the Netherlands logs an increase of 1.6% month-to-month. The sequential data, looking at sales over 12 months to six months to three months, largely points to a continuation of this period of lethargic sales. Germany, the U.K., and Norway each are posting a sequential deceleration, as the rate of sales slows over progressively shorter time periods. Denmark and the Netherlands have somewhat erratic performance on retail sales, with no clear trends. Sweden stands alone as the only country with retail sales clearly accelerating, rising 4.2% at an annual rate over 12 months, at a 4.4% annual rate over six months, and at a 5.8% annual rate over three months.

    Challenging outlook The retail environment remains challenging in Europe. Oil prices are rising; the European Central Bank is expected to take steps to deal with excessive inflation and rising oil prices with at least one rate hike. The war in Ukraine remains hot; the war in the Middle East may be cooling down, but the Strait of Hormuz is still not open for business. The global economy continues to face significant challenges.