Money growth trends and the major money center economies are not showing any clear indication toward economic weakness despite widespread pessimism on the part of economists and market prognosticators.
Money growth is accelerating as its growth speeds up over one year compared to its growth over either two or three years in the EMU, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Credit growth in the EMU also speeds up on this sequence- not usually a slowdown signal. The lone exception here is Japan where its fight against deflation is finally won and morphed into an inflation problem that the Bank of Japan is fighting with its usual gradualism. Japan’s money supply growth slows over two years compared to three years and over one year compared to two years. However, back in Europe, credit growth in the EMU is showing acceleration on this timeline. Japan is the only ‘slowdown signal.’
We can also peruse the growth rates for real money balances. The EMU, the U.S., and the U.K. show that ‘real money balance’ growth picks up for two-years compared to three-years and accelerates again over one year compared to two-years. Acceleration is in train as real money balance growth transitions from a shrinking profile to positive growth rates in these three countries. Japan is an exception here as it still logs all negative growth rates and these do get progressively weaker (-1.2% over three years to -1.5% over two years to -2.8% over one year).
Shorter terms trends (for the skeptical) Within the one-year horizons (12-month to 6-month to 3-month), the annualized nominal growth rate in the EMU weaken from 3.4% over 12 months to 2.0% over three months, but real balance growth is nearly unchanged at 1.1% over 12 months compared to 0.9% over three months annualized. Real credit on these time sequences accelerates in the EMU. U.S. real M2 growth generally accelerates from 12-months to 3-months. The same is true for the U.K. but not as steadily. Japan’s progress shows growth rate declines but not getting progressively weaker.
Through all of this, nominal oil prices are steadily falling. While the pace of decline lets up over two years, the 3-year and 12-month growth rates are nearly identical.