Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • The overarching survey indicator for March stepped up despite enhanced global challenges. The March headline index rose to 99.3 from 98 in both January and February.

    The March level of the headline compares to a 12-month average of 97.2. Nearly all the components in March are above their 12-month averages. The exception is the output change, which is substantially weaker than its 12-month average. Expected production, at 3.1 in March, is just a tick below its 12 month average of 3.2. Finally, expected employment in March is tied with its 12-month average.

    In addition, only 3 readings weaker month-to-month in March were output change, expected production, and expected employment.

    On the month, output change is a weak reading, falling by 3.5 points month-to-month; it may be the clearest example of the report showing weakness ahead, affected by upcoming global issues related to the war and rising oil and energy prices.

    In addition to output change, expected production slipped to 3.1 in March from 4.8 in February. There was also a step back in expected employment, a modest one to 0.8 in March from 1.0 in February.

    But order books showed a 10.2 reading in March, up from 5.6 in February. Changes in new foreign orders and total orders both showed more strength in March than in February, with foreign orders at 5.5 in March compared to 5.2 in February. The change in total orders, at 10.2 in March, was much stronger than 5.6 in February. Inventories registered 0.6 in March, up from -0.3 in February.

    However, capacity space is being used up as capacity use rose to 77.0 in March from 76.6 in February.

    The employment metric at 2.6 in March was much stronger than its zero reading in February.

    On balance, the components indicate the sector is moving ahead as the headline gain suggests in March. But the major question mark is probably the strength in orders—which we take to be forward-looking compared to the setback in output change.

    The index in March has a 64.1 percentile standing. Only three components in March ranked below their respective 50% marks (below their medians). The strongest readings generated standings in the 90th and mid-80th-percentile levels. These included finished inventories, the change in total orders, and order books. The lagging components, below their median values, were output change, expected production, and capacity utilization.

    The French industrial readings are surprising for their resilience.

  • The German PPI rose by 2.4% month-to-month in March. That was, of course, boosted by oil prices as Brent crude soared, gaining 46.9% month-over-month (yikes!). However, very little of that got into German ex-energy prices, which did rise, but by only 0.4%. Still, do not be fooled by that ‘only.’ That 0.4% rise is the largest rise of that magnitude since February 2023—a period of about 2¼ years. So be wary of what might be in train here; 0.4% does not seem so large, but it annualizes to about a 5% pace.

    In addition, 12 months to six months to three months, the headline PPI is accelerating—from a 12-month drop, to a well-behaved 2.1% pace of expansion over six months, and then to an elevated 3.9% annual rate over three months.

    The core PPI is a bit more copacetic, but it shows clear acceleration, rising from a 12-month pace of 1.3%, to a 1.8% pace over six months, and to 2.4% annualized over three months.

    Consumer prices in Germany The sky is not falling. So far, there is no evidence of inflation in consumer goods: the consumer goods index does not even rise over 12 months, six months, or three months—though it is flat over three months. Investment goods, by contrast, show clear price acceleration, rising from 1.9% over 12 months, to 2.6% over six months, and to 4.1% over three months. Intermediate goods show the inflation wallop as prices rise by 1.5% over 12 months, to a 5.1% pace over six months, and at an 8.1% annual rate pace over three months. That annualized intermediate goods gain is something to watch. It is driven by oil, but other commodities and goods are caught up in supply chain woes as well.

    For reference, the headline CPI shows acceleration, rising from a 12-month pace of 2.7% to a 5% annualized rate over three months. The ex-energy CPI, however, remains subdued, rising 2.3% over 12 month and at a more modest 2% annualized pace over three months.

  • In this week’s Letter, we take stock of the latest economic data from China, assessing what it tells us about the outlook for growth and policy. We also continue our coverage of the Middle East conflict, focusing on its broader implications for Asia through energy markets, trade routes, and regional risk sentiment.On China, while Q1 GDP data exceeded expectations, putting the economy on a firm footing to meet its annual growth target (chart 1), a closer look at the underlying monthly indicators suggests the headline resilience may be masking a more uneven underlying picture (chart 2).

    As for the Middle East, the latest round of regional March CPI prints largely confirms the initial pass-through from higher oil prices to consumer inflation. If energy prices remain elevated, second-round effects will likely become more evident in the coming months (chart 3). Turning to the Strait of Hormuz, shipping data point to a gradual recovery in flows. However, conflicting signals on the strait’s status—alongside renewed US–Iran tensions—continue to cloud the outlook for a sustained normalization in global oil supply (chart 4). In response, global players have begun to adapt, including rerouting shipments via the longer but safer Cape of Good Hope route, and exploring alternative export channels through Red Sea ports, even though these remain exposed to regional risks (chart 5). Finally, the conflict has prompted a reassessment of the global outlook. In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF delivered broad-based growth downgrades across economies, with only a handful of exceptions (chart 6).

    China China released a raft of data late last week, with March figures particularly pertinent as they capture the initial effects of the Middle East conflict that erupted in late February. Notably, Q1 GDP exceeded expectations, with the economy expanding 5% y/y despite incorporating March data (chart 1). This suggests China has secured a firm early footing toward its 4.5%–5% growth target for the year—a slight step down from last year’s “about 5%” goal. But a closer look at the March data reveals several nuances. On the external front, export growth slowed sharply year-to-date, falling behind import growth, thereby dragging on trade balance growth.

    • Downward noise in utility output; slow activity in manufacturing and mining.
    • Flat underlying trend in recent months.
    • Current General Activity Index up 8.6 pts. to 26.7 in Apr.; fourth consecutive m/m rise.
    • Positive: Shipments (34.0), highest since May ’22; New Orders (33.0), highest since Nov. ’21.
    • Negative: Employment (-5.1), lowest since June ’25; Unfilled Orders (-10.2), ninth straight contraction.
    • Inflation indicators at eight-month highs and well above long-run nonrecession avgs.
    • Future General Activity Index up to 40.8; most subindexes down but still positive; future price indexes still above long-run avgs.
    • New claims fell by 11,000 to 207,000.
    • Continuing claims jumped 31,000 to 1.818 million.
    • The insured unemployment rate was unchanged at 1.2%.
    • Despite a 9.4% m/m jump in imported petroleum prices, import prices rose a less-than-expected 0.8% in March with a small downward revision to February.
    • Export prices increased more than did import prices, rising 1.6% m/m in March, but this was also less than expected.
    • Purchase applications -1.0% w/w, third decline in four weeks; refinancing loan applications +5.1% w/w, first rise since the March 6 week.
    • Effective interest rate on 30-year fixed loans down 8bps to 6.60%, a four-week low.
    • Average loan size up to the highest level since the March 13 week.