Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2024

    • Gain follows two months of weakening.
    • Median sales price falls to two-year low.
    • Sales were strong regionally, except in the West.
    • $88.46 billion deficit in December, a three-month low, matching expectations.
    • Exports gain 2.5% following two straight m/m declines.
    • Imports rebound 1.3%, the third m/m increase in four months.
    • Weakness concentrated in transportation and defense.
    • Excluding transportation and defense, orders rose a solid 1.3% m/m.
    • Core capital goods orders posted 0.3% m/m gain while core shipments edged up.
    • January 20 week’s initial claims up 25,000.
    • Continuing claims up 27,000 in January 13 week.
    • Insured unemployment rate steady at 1.2%.
  • The Belgian National Bank index fell to -16.4 in January from -12.7 in December, snaking below its November 2023 level of -15.0. The index by itself is not particularly significant except it does track quite effectively both the German and the EU indexes issued by the European Commission. Since the Belgian index is released first, it's a harbinger of what we can expect from those other indexes and what's suggested here is that there will be further deterioration in January.

    The total index The total industry Belgian index has a correlation of 0.85 with the EU index and of 0.78 with the German index. However, it's correlation based on month-to-month changes is even higher, at 0.92 with the EU changes and 0.85 with the German changes. These are all respectably high numbers and the correlations with the changes are quite high. The correlation on the changes corresponds with an R-squared with the EU of 0.86 and an R-squared with the German changes of 0.72.

    Manufacturing in Belgium The Belgian manufacturing index slips to -22 in January from -17.8 December and is below its November value of -19.3. In January, the production trend turned more deeply negative, logging a reading of -19 compared to -7 in December and -5 in November. The domestic and foreign order trends also deteriorated in January compared to December; however, the foreign order trend in January is above its November level. Prices continue to show negative values and then in January the price trend declined by more after declining by less in December.

    Other Belgian sectors Wholesaling and retailing strengthened in January compared to December, but metric is weaker than its November reading. Similarly, construction weakened relative to December but it's stronger than its November reading. Business services along with inventories are the only surveyed metrics that show positive readings. In January business services weakened compared to December, falling to +4.6 from +9.8; however, the January reading is still stronger than the November reading.

    Trending changes Looking at changes in these metrics, only business services show positive changes over three months, six months, and 12 months. Prices and domestic order trends are the only metrics that show positive changes over three months and six months.

    Rank standings The rank percentile standings reveal that weak readings abound in every one of the categories, showing percentile standings below their respective 50th percentiles everywhere. That means that all the readings are below their respective medians for this period. Data in the table are ranked across observations back to January 2010.

    The distribution of weakness is concentrated in the areas of ‘very weak’ The only category close to its median for the period was inventories with the 49.2 percentile standing. After that, the next strongest standing is business services at a 38-percentile standing, followed by prices at a 25.8 percentile standing. The third highest standing in the table is at the border of its bottom quartile! After ‘prices’ all the categories are somewhere in their 15th percentile with all but one of the remaining categories below their respective 10th percentiles.

    Weak with weak momentum These conditions show us a great deal of weakness in Belgium from an index that is highly correlated with German and EU indexes. The only momentum in this table comes from Belgian business services where there's a steady diet of positive changes underway. The changes that are underway for business services are tending to get larger/stronger over shorter periods, which is a good sign. However, manufacturing continues to show negative results and the current assessment for orders continues to show negative results.

  • Financial markets have taken their cue from company-specific developments in recent days with positive news from the technology sector Ieading the way. Lingering tensions in the Middle East, however, are now affecting shipping costs more adversely (see chart 1) and raising concerns about the durability of global supply chains. Recent commentary and some data points, in the meantime, have also been casting doubts on the willingness of central banks to pivot toward looser monetary policy (see chart 2) notwithstanding the more downbeat messages from manufacturing surveys (chart 3). Over in Asia, this week’s announcement of a forthcoming 50bps cut in reserve requirements is a strong hint that China’s central bank could loosen its policy settings in the coming weeks. Policymakers have certainly appeared more mindful of late about its ailing domestic equity market (see charts 4 and 5). That stands in vivid contrast to Japan, however, where equity markets have climbed to new 33-year highs this week even as the Bank of Japan has been hinting at steps to begin normalizing its monetary policy (chart 6).

    • Applications rise to highest level since early-May, 2023.
    • Purchase applications move up, but loans to refinance fall.
    • Long-term interest rates stay close to seven-month low.
  • Global| Jan 24 2024

    S&P Flash MFG PMIs

    The chart is for the European Monetary Union and there we see relative stability for services activity as manufacturing is turning higher. Turning to the table we see most of the responses- that means 10 out of 16 responses- show conditions in manufacturing or for services or for the composite, improving rather than weakening in January 2024. December also showed a strong move towards strengthening compared to weakening, especially against the history of the recent past. December also showed 10 metrics strengthening and only six weakening.

    Beginning with this report our history for comparison moves up to January 2020 instead of to January 2019. On this timeline, the January 2024 values for the PMI responses in the table show only three above the 50% mark which means there are only three that have PMI standings above their median for this period.

    Despite the slight improving tone in this report, it's quite clear that the changes and these PMI metrics back to January 2020 show that all but six of them are still lower than they were at that time - a significant span of four years. That's a long time for PMI gauges to not have improved.

    With this improvement in January, on the heels of improvement in December, we now have over three months improvement across the board with only four exceptions. The exceptions are France where the service sector deteriorates and drags the composite down as well. The service sector in Germany weakens over three months and the manufacturing sector in Japan does so too.

    On balance, over three months we're seeing improvements occur in the European Monetary Union, the aggregate index is up by 1.3 points, pushed strongly ahead by an improvement in manufacturing of 3.5 points, while services sector only creeps higher during this period rising by 0.5 points. The U.K. shows improvement on all gauged in each of the last three months – a power-house response and the strongest composite gain over three months in the table.