- ISM Mfg. PMI up to a higher-than-expected 52.6 in Jan.; first expansion since Jan. ’25.
- Production (55.9) expands for the fourth time in five mths.; new orders (57.1) expand for the first time since Aug.; both at their highest since Feb. ’22.
- Employment (48.1) contracts for the 28th straight mth. after expanding in Sept. ’23.
- Prices Index (59.0) shows prices rising for the 16th consecutive mth., the fastest increase in four mths.
- Exports (50.2) expand for the first time since Feb. ’25; imports (50.0) unchanged after nine mths. of contraction.
More Commentaries
Global| Jan 29 2026Charts of the Week: Weaker Dollar, Stronger Tech
Financial markets have seen renewed gyrations in recent weeks, with a weaker US dollar, higher interest rate volatility and shifting capital flows reviving discussion of a “Sell America” narrative — so far more a marginal rebalancing than a wholesale retreat. The Federal Open Market Committee left the federal funds rate unchanged at its latest meeting, as widely expected, but communications around the outlook for future easing were arguably a little more hawkish than anticipated, reinforcing a cautious and increasingly data-dependent policy stance. In our charts this week we begin with January’s flash PMIs, which point to ongoing expansion across most major economies but with clear cross-country divergence in momentum (chart 1). That uneven real-economy picture has been mirrored in FX: the broad trade-weighted dollar depreciated through the first half of 2025, stabilised later in the year, but has now softened more abruptly at the start of 2026—suggesting a shift in risk premia and capital-flow dynamics (chart 2). Consistent with that, consumer confidence has weakened noticeably in the US relative to the euro area and UK, with the deterioration looking more tied to politics and labour-market perceptions (chart 3). Even so, global equity sentiment has remained comparatively upbeat, supported by a still-favourable macro mix in which global growth surprises have tended to run ahead of expectations while inflation surprises have been softer—tentatively consistent with an improving supply-side backdrop that markets increasingly associate with AI (chart 4). Finally, that theme is reinforced by hard activity indicators: US orders and imports of advanced technology products remain strong (chart 5), and Taiwan’s production data show a parallel surge in electronics output upstream (chart 6), pointing to a still-powerful global tech cycle even as broader macro and market narratives become more unsettled.
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
- Factory orders +2.7% m/m in Nov.; +5.4% y/y, largest y/y increase since June.
- Durable goods +5.3% m/m; nondurable goods orders flat; shipments marginally down.
- Transportation orders +14.7% m/m, led by a 97.6% surge in nondefense aircraft orders.
- Unfilled orders +1.4%, biggest of four straight m/m gains.
- Inventories +0.1% after October’s flat reading.
- USA| Jan 29 2026
Revised Productivity: No adjustment to Robust Growth in Q3
- Strong growth in output with little increase in labor input reinforced a firm underlying trend in productivity.
- Efficiency gains in Q3 more than offset growth in labor compensation.
- USA| Jan 29 2026
U.S. Trade Deficit Widened in November
- The overall deficit widened to $56.8 billion in November from $29.2 billion in October.
- The goods deficit widened markedly to $86.9 billion from $59.0 in October.
- The services surplus widened modestly to $30.1 billion from $29.8 billion in October.
- Exports fell 3.6% m/m, the first monthly decline in six months, while imports rebounded 5.0% m/m.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- Initial claims declined by 1,000 from the prior week.
- Continuing claims declined by 38,000 from the prior week to the lowest level since September 2024.
- The insured unemployment rate was unchanged.
- Europe| Jan 29 2026
EU Commission Indexes for EMU Turn Higher
In January, we see an uptick in the EU Commission indexes that chronicle conditions in the European Monetary Union. The overall index is up smartly to 99.4 in January from 97.2 in December with improvement in four of the five subindexes with construction being unchanged month-to-month and for three months in a row; construction is also the strongest sector among the five by a long shot. The top line EMU reading was last this strong in January 2023, two years ago, on an isolated reading. It was last stronger for a string of period March 2021 through February 2022, in the heat of the post-Covid revival, averaging 111.6 on that span and reaching a monthly value as high as 119.9.
Rank standings rise and firm The overall EU Commission index has the queue percentile standing at its 46.7 percentile, very close to the 50% mark that establishes the median for the series among the five components. Retailing and construction are both above their respective 50% marks, with retailing at a 56-percentile standing and construction at an 81.9 percentile standing. The weakest reading is on consumer confidence at a 26.6 percentile standing, while services have a 43.5 percentile standing with the industrial sector at a 43.4 percentile standing. Both the services and industrial readings are climbing up closer to their respective medians but not quite there yet.
Largest economies show the clearest turns All four of the largest economies showed monthly increases in January with the largest increase a 6.1% month-to-month increase by France; the smallest was a 1.3% increase by Italy. While that's good news, it's also true that all four of those readings had declined in December compared to November. For the rest of the countries of the Monetary Union, eight of those 14 countries experienced month-to-month setbacks to their overall confidence readings in January, but only 3 of those 14 countries had experienced contractions in December and only 3 of them had experienced contractions in November; and, in November, only one of the four largest economies had experienced contraction.
Generally, positive developments are afoot Generally speaking, the trends are moving in a positive direction despite monthly volatility across the 18 early reporting countries; 9 of them show queue percentile standings above the 50th percentile, 2 of those are among the four largest economies, Italy and Spain. Quite clearly conditions within the monetary union remain mixed but the upward momentum and recent improvement is unmistakable.
Sector performance in largest EMU economies Among the four largest economies, the industrial sector has an above 50 percentile ranking in France and in Spain. Germany, and Italy are lagging behind. Construction has above 50-percentile standing in each of the four largest economies except France where its percentile standing is in its 42nd percentile. Spain does not report consumer confidence, retailing, and services numbers separately. Among the remaining big three countries, only Italy has readings above its 50-percentile mark and those are only in retailing and services. Consumer confidence continues to lag everywhere with the highest assessment among the BIG-4 economies in Germany with the 45.8 percentile standing and the lowest in France at a 20.4 percentile standing.
Tracking improvement The chart at the top shows that in broad terms we can see the improvement is relatively long lived for the BIG-3 economies and in EMU. We can be hopeful that there really is a trend of improvement that is taking hold. From mid-2025 or so onward, there are steady improvements in gear. Two of the BIG-3 economies are improving along with the EMU aggregate; only Germany tends to flatline on that timeline. The recent improvement in Germany is a relatively new feature in what otherwise looks like German stability. These trends now have some length, making the momentum seem more durable.
- USA| Jan 28 2026
U.S. Mortgage Applications Dropped in the Week of January 23
- Purchase and refinancing loan applications declined in the latest week.
- Effective interest rate on 30-year fixed loans rose 8bps to 6.40%.
- Average loan size declined.
- USA| Jan 27 2026
Consumer Confidence Tumbled in January
- Both expectations and assessments of the present situation contributed to the decline
- The index moved to a new low for the current cycle.
- A softening labor market played a role.
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