Against a backdrop of persistent geopolitical tensions, firmer energy prices and a busy week of central bank meetings—including the Fed, ECB, BoE and BoJ—financial markets have remained notably resilient, even as the macro narrative has softened at the margin. The message from this week’s charts is one of growing tension beneath that surface calm. Front-end bond yields have moved higher, signalling a shift toward a more cautious, “higher-for-longer” policy outlook (chart 1). At the same time, real-time recession indicators for the United States suggest risks remain contained for now (chart 2). Consumer confidence data paint a more uneven picture, with sharper declines in the euro area and UK than in the US, highlighting regional vulnerabilities to the current energy shock (chart 3). The ECB’s latest bank lending survey reinforces this, pointing to tighter credit conditions and weaker demand—factors that are likely to weigh further on European growth (chart 4). By contrast, developments in the semiconductor sector underline a different dynamic: an intensifying global boom, with accelerating price pressures reflecting both strong AI-driven demand and emerging supply-side constraints linked indirectly to energy and logistics disruptions (chart 5). Finally, labour market data confirm that the AI surge is not merely a market narrative but a tangible structural shift, with hiring for AI-related roles accelerating across economies (chart 6). Taken together, these signals point to a more complex macro environment—one in which resilient markets coexist with softening growth, more persistent inflation risks and increasingly delicate policy trade-offs.
Global| Apr 30 2026Charts of the Week: Tension Beneath the Surface
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
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Global| Apr 29 2026Globally, Money Supplies Accelerate... No Problemo?
Globally, money supplies are accelerating. Three- and six-month money growth rates equal or exceed the year-on-year pace everywhere, and the 12-month growth rates accelerate over the recent 12 months compared to the 12-month pace of one year ago—except for the United Kingdom, where data lag by one month. This deviation may amount to the lack of topicality since money, credit, and inflation all are caught in an updraft prompted by rising oil prices. The oil price (Brent) is up at a 468% annual rate over three months, and over 12 months the oil price is up by 31.7%, compared to a 5.5% rise over 12 months one-year ago.
Rising oil prices do NOT create inflation Now we all know that rising oil prices do not create inflation. So, thankfully, the 468% rise in oil prices is not driving up the inflation rate. But unfortunately, it is helping to drive up the price level. So, we are drawing a distinction between the price level and the inflation rate.
The year-over-year change in a price metric, like the CPI, is just that: the year-on-year gain. We often refer to this as ‘THE’ inflation rate. But that is only if the price level was at—and continued to rise at (about)—that same pace. Inflation is an ongoing rise in the price level. No one in their right mind thinks oil prices are going to rise by 468% year-over-year persistently. But of course, oil is a cost to producers and a price to consumers. It is a price that must be paid and cost that must be borne. The question is how much this bump-up in oil prices will contribute to the prices of the items we track in our various national price indexes in the future. Here I will refer to the CPI as the price index. And then we ask if that one-time rise in the relative price of oil will continue to bump up prices by the same amount month-after-month in the future. If it is, it is creating inflation. If not, it is creating a realignment of relative prices. The rise in relative prices is real. It may be painful to some and remunerative to others. The effects are complex.
But the spike in oil prices is not inflation. Even though we are tracking an unknown price rise that is continuing to waffle, I will speak of it as though we know the ultimate rise and speak of that as a one-time surge.
Expressed in this way, you should be able to see the oil price spurt as painful and as something that may be a temporary boost to inflation. If the price stays high, it will boost the price level based on the pass-through by commodity. After the oil price spurt, prices may be higher, but inflation will go back to ‘where it was.’
But all that happens if and only if monetary policy does not accommodate—does not monetize—the rise in oil prices. Unfortunately, we see money supplies are accelerating. Central banks have stepped up their rate of printing money as oil prices have risen, in order to stabilize interest rates. Printing more money, or increasing the money stock faster, is inflationary.
- USA| Apr 28 2026
Consumer Confidence: Modest Change in April
- Expectations improved slightly in April, but are still subdued relative to norms.
- Moderately favorable view of current conditions.
- February FHFA HPI 0.0% m/m; +1.7% y/y, lowest since Mar. ’12.
- House prices down m/m in four of nine census divisions, led by Mountain (-1.1%); up in four, driven by South Atlantic (+0.6%); flat in East North Central.
- House prices up y/y in six of nine regions, led by Middle Atlantic (+4.2%), but down in Mountain (-0.7%), Pacific (-0.4%), and West South Central (-0.1%).
Global| Apr 28 2026EMU PPIs Show Instant Pressure
Early PPI reports in the monetary union show collective pressures building over the past year, with newly emergent pressures popping up strongly in March.
The sequence of monthly inflation observations for these five early reporters in March shows that inflation pressure has not been clearly building but did jump up suddenly in March. In February, before the Iran war, the median monthly PPI gain was -0.5%. In March, that jumped to +3.9% (median month-to-month gain). Monthly pressure does not show steady gains anywhere except moderately in Germany. Finland shows deceleration in progress (!) even through—especially through—March, as its PPI in March fell by 5.3%. But the whole Finish pattern is somewhat upside down, with prices up month-to-month by 6.2% in January and 2.9% in February. It is not a trend that is easy to understand.
However, the March monthly gains are strong enough to drive sequential inflation higher from 12-months, to 6-months, to 3-months across all early-reporting countries. Even the German ex-energy index shows acceleration on that profile.
On a year-on-year basis, two of the early reporters have PPI inflation below 2%. Finland has 12-month PPI inflation at 2.1%, but Italy and Spain have inflation much higher, up by 3.4% over 12 months in Spain and by 5.6% in Italy.
The PPI has been very well-behaved in the last few years. Looking at 12-month changes for the year ended in March, the median change for this group in 2025 was -0.1%, compared to -4.6% in 2024.
The chart shows the PPI flared sharply in 2021 and 2022, then fell quickly into line in 2023. Clearly, the inflation tune now is being called by oil prices, the same as for that spike prices in 2022 and 2023.
The hope is that the oil price bump up will not be as long-lived, that the war will end soon, with the Strait of Hormuz reopened, and that oil prices—and other inflation pressures—will sink back to prerevision norms relatively quickly. That could happen, but so could other outcomes so markets remain wary. One problem this time is the destruction of oil facilities and the shutting of oil fields that could cause high prices to linger longer.
Asia| Apr 27 2026Economic Letter from Asia: Not Just About the Strait
In this week’s Letter, we cover the latest developments and implications of the Middle East conflict for Asia, while also making space for other important themes, including artificial intelligence (AI). The Middle East conflict remains in a no deal state coming out of the weekend, though some early Monday optimism emerged in Asian markets following Iran’s reported offer to reopen the Strait of Hormuz (chart 1). Nonetheless, as the Strait closure drags on, so too do the fiscal costs of domestic fossil fuel subsidies across Asia, which have been shown to move closely with crude oil prices (chart 2). While such measures offer direct relief by cushioning household energy costs, they remain difficult to sustain over the long haul.
Over the week, we also saw a further fraying in regional monetary policy trends, with the Philippines hiking its policy rate for the first time in about two years amid inflation concerns, while Indonesia stood pat on rates (chart 3). Investor attention is likely to remain fixed on monetary policy this week, with the Bank of Japan due to decide on policy. Expectations for an April hike have faded amid the persistent Middle East conflict, though yen weakness continues to present a source of concern (chart 4). The week also brings China’s latest PMI readings (chart 5), adding to the recent run of hard data accompanying the Q1 GDP release.
Beyond the Middle East conflict, the evolution of AI continues to demand close attention. Before geopolitical tensions took centre stage, AI was the dominant market narrative — and that enthusiasm has hardly faded. If anything, recent developments suggest the story is broadening: use cases are expanding, scalability is improving, and access is widening beyond large corporates to the mass market — increasingly spilling into the realm of physical AI. It may well be this persistent wave of optimism that is helping to underpin equity valuations, even as the geopolitical backdrop darkens (chart 6).
The Middle East conflict About two months in, we remain stuck in the limbo of the US-Iran conflict, which has left the Strait of Hormuz largely closed and much of the world starved of the critical oil flows needed to power the global economy. The back and forth between the US and Iran has persisted in recent weeks, with both sides again failing to reach a peace deal over the weekend, though Monday’s news of Iran offering to reopen the Strait has revived some hope in markets. In truth, commodity and market valuations do not hinge so much on a peace deal itself, but rather on the resumption of oil flows through the Strait, something that could materialise even in the absence of a formal deal, though any agreement that includes and credibly delivers such a reopening would likely be warmly received by markets. Until then, market gyrations are likely to persist, with prices fluctuating in response to each new snippet of news. And until then, the world will continue both to be starved of, while gradually adapting to, the drip feed of oil flows emerging from the Strait.
- United Kingdom| Apr 27 2026
U.K. Retail Sales: Worse Than During Covid
The Distributive Trades Survey
The U.K. Distributive Trades Survey for April 2026 and the look-ahead expectation readings for May paint an extremely soured outlook for the U.K. economy.
Retail ranking: Surveys for retail sales compared to a year ago, orders compared to a year ago, and sales evaluated for the time of year all have rankings near zero, which is the worst result on this timeline. This zero distinction applies to retail sales compared to a year ago. The best ranking is 11.6%; that is for sales evaluated for the time of year. Orders compared to a year ago have a 4.2 percentile standing. The stock-to-sales ratio—which is a completely different concept—shows that the inventory-to-sales ratio has a 29.9 percentile standing.
Retail diffusion: The raw April diffusion readings (up minus down diffusion) show that sales compared to a year ago slipped to a reading of -68 in April from -52 in March. Orders fell to -46 in April from -26 in March. Sales evaluated for the time of year fell to -32 April from -23 in March. All three measures weakened, and all three weakened decisively, resulting in extremely weak rankings. All of the rankings are executed on data back to 2002.
Expectations for retailing: The expectations readings for May show slippage again across all three metrics: expected sales compared to a year ago, expected orders compared to a year ago, and expected sales for the time of year. Expected sales compared to a year ago fell to -60 in May from -49 in April. Orders compared to a year ago declined to -45 in May from -30 in April, and sales for the time of year slipped to -43 from -19. In May, these readings have rankings in a 0.4 percentile standing for sales compared to a year ago, a 1.8 percentile standing for sales evaluated relative to the time of year, and a 4.6 percentile standing for orders compared to a year ago. These two panels on current and expected retail sales volumes are just simply terrible: weak monthly, weak in ranking terms, and showing slipping momentum.
The distributor trade series also provides data on the wholesale sector. While the wholesale sector is not quite as beat up as the retail sector, it's still extremely weak. There is no cause for any kind of hope that things are getting better based on wholesaling trends.
Wholesaling: The wholesale survey for sales compared to a year ago edged lower to -32 in April from -31 in March. Orders compared to a year ago remained at a reading of -41 in April. Sales evaluated for the time of year improved to a reading of -20 in April from -39 in March—a significant step up, but still very weak. The percentile standings for these three categories show sales compared to a year ago at the 8.8 percentile, orders compared to a year ago at the 5.6 percentile, and sales evaluated for the time of year at the 14.8 percentile.
Wholesale Expectations: The look-ahead observations, which provide expectations for wholesaling in May, show a similar constellation of readings, with sales compared to a year ago falling to -37 in May from -27 in April and orders compared to a year ago falling to -42 from -38, while sales evaluated for the time of year improved to 16 from 37. That category for wholesale sales improved both in April in real time and in May for expectations; however, it continues to have a very weak percentile standing, at the 17.9 percentile in May, while sales for a year ago have a 6.7 percentile standing and orders for a year ago have a 6.0 percentile standing.
- Germany| Apr 24 2026
German Ifo Plunges Everywhere
The onset of the war in Iran appears to have hit the German economy extremely hard as the Ifo survey shows very substantial and broad-based decline across its survey in April. The Ifo survey features readings for five sectors as well as an aggregate reading, and it surveys them for climate, current conditions, and expectations. The decline in the Ifo survey is present for all three concepts and across all five sectors, marking the weakening in April as a highly significant and extremely disturbing development. Only manufacturing in the current conditions survey escapes a month-to-month decline.
The Ifo sequences: The climate reading fell both overall and across each of the five sectors. Current conditions declined for the overall and for four of the five sectors, with manufacturing the sole exception. Expectations declined for the overall and for all sectors. Several of the sector declines were for a very substantial magnitude, especially when compared to historic changes in these indexes.
Monthly changes in readings—severe broad deterioration The month-to-month change in the climate reading has weakened more month-to-month 19% of the time. That overall result, however, is boosted by manufacturing where the monthly change has been weaker 35% of the time (on data back to 2011). However, all other sectors have seen climate weaker m/m only 2.3% to 6.3% of the time! The current situation readings weakened, with the headline weakening more m/m 11% of the time. This was boosted by manufacturing, the only sector that improved on the month; its ranking on change was in its 85th percentile—quite good and truly stand-alone good news. The other current changes by sector ranged from construction being weaker 1.7% of the time, to retailing that has been weaker about 30% of the time in terms of m/m changes. Expectation changes were uniformly terrible, with the headline drop weaker only 6.3% of the time and sector change month-to-month weaker between 9% and 1.7% of the time. The monthly weakening was uniform and substantial. I document it with these calculations, but you can also see it on the chart above.
Climate: The bottom line is that the all-sector index for climate fell to -20.3 in April from -18 in March, placing it at a 10.5 percentile standing on data since 1993. The sector ranking is the highest for construction with a 42.2 percentile standing and the weakness for services at a 1.1 percentile standing—weaker than the table reading nearly 99% of the time. In terms of percentile standing levels or monthly changes, conditions are closing in on grim.
Current conditions: Current conditions saw the all-sector index slip to -5.3 in April from -2.4 in March. The headline ranking stands at a 9.8 percentile mark, making it—like the climate reading—weaker than its current reading only about 10% of the time. The strongest reading under current conditions is for construction which has a 60.6 percentile standing; it is the only ranking in the table above its historic median. Manufacturing, the only sector in the survey that improved month-to-month, has a 22.5 percentile standing, while services record the weakest percentile standing under current conditions, at an 8.4 percentile standing.
Expectations: The all-sector index for expectations fell to -25.3 in April from -19.9 in March, placing it at a 6.3 percentile standing. The percentile standings across sectors range from a high of 9.5% for manufacturing to a low of 1.5% for retailing. Up until earlier this year, the Ifo was showing signs of improvement; however, all of that has simply collapsed in the last month. Weakness is across economic concepts and sectors, as documented above. For reference, the table also gives a separate set of rankings on where the various indexes stand since the invasion of Ukraine, since that was another marked event that drove the index, that had been improving after Covid, down to lower levels. Ranked even on this reduced scale looking at conditions only since the invasion of Ukraine, when conditions have generally been weaker, the current rankings across the Ifo survey remained extremely weak. This is a very disturbing survey for the German economy.
Global| Apr 23 2026Charts of the Week: Risks Build, Markets Shrug
Financial markets have remained notably calm in recent weeks despite rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, a more downbeat macroeconomic narrative and elevated uncertainty. Measures of financial stress and volatility remain low, and equity markets continue to look through both the conflict and softer data. That resilience sits alongside a more nuanced macro backdrop. The IMF’s latest WEO revisions point to a classic stagflationary energy shock—growth downgraded and inflation revised higher—although the global impact remains modest and uneven, with some economies still benefiting from stronger momentum (chart 1). At the same time, market pricing appears increasingly detached from the data flow, with volatility declining even as growth surprises have turned more negative relative to inflation (charts 2 and 3). Incoming inflation data reinforce the idea of a largely headline-driven shock, with nowcasts rising in line with higher energy prices but only limited pass-through into core inflation so far (charts 4 and 5). However, it remains early days. Survey evidence, such as the latest ZEW release, suggests that inflation expectations may already be responding in a more concerning way, with a marked rise alongside weakening growth sentiment (chart 6). Taken together, the key question for markets is whether this remains a contained, energy-driven shock that can be looked through—or whether it begins to embed more persistently via expectations, forcing a reassessment of the currently benign outlook.
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
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