EMU Inflation Trends Offer Hope and Hype- Inflation in the European Monetary Union rose by 0.2% month-to-month in April, the same as in March. Core inflation, however, picked up, rising by 0.4% but that was after being flat in March. The sequential growth rates from 12-months to six-months to three-months show the headline inflation rate at 2.4% over 12-months falling to 2% over 6-months, then rising to a 3% annual rate over three-months. The core rate for the monetary union rose 2.9% over 12-months at a 2.7% annual rate over six-months, it steps up to a 2.8% annual rate over three-months. Headline inflation is resisting moving down to the 2% level consistently while core inflation appears to be stuck just short of 3%. Whether these trends are good enough depends on whether the ECB sees itself implementing precision-guided policy or playing horseshoes and hand grenades.
- Single-family starts decline but multi-family surge.
- Starts are mixed throughout the country.
- Building permits fall to lowest level in over one year.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 16 2024
U.S. Industrial Production Unchanged in April
- IP was unchanged in April with manufacturing falling 0.3% m/m
- Manufacturing decline led by 2.0% m/m drop in motor vehicle output
- Mining fell for the third month of the past four
- Capacity utilization slipped to 78.4%
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 16 2024
U.S. Import & Export Prices Strengthen in April
- Import prices rise for fourth consecutive month.
- Excluding fuels, import prices edge up for sixth straight month.
- Export price gain improves.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 16 2024
Philly Fed Manufacturing Index Falls in May
- Even with the May decline, the index remains in positive territory, pointing to expansion.
- However, both shipments and orders subindexes fell markedly and more worryingly into contraction territory.
- The employment subindex rose slightly but remained negative.
- Expectations decline slightly but remain elevated.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 16 2024
U.S. Unemployment Insurance Claims Ease by 10,000 in May 11 Week
- Initial claims come back toward recent tight range
- Continued weeks claimed rise somewhat in May 4 week
- But insured unemployment rate holds at 1.2% into a 14th month
- Japan| May 16 2024
Japan’s IP Jumps but… Everybody Knows This is Nowhere
Despite a sharp 4.5% month-to-month jump in Japan’s industrial production, a gain much larger than expected, Japan’s production index is still lower on balance over three-months six-months and twelve-months. It is still 5.8% below its level in January 2020 before Covid struck and it is only 87% of its past cycle peak. The March jump by itself is impressive and welcome, but Japan still has so far to go to repair the disruption it has had in manufacturing and across industry.
Global| May 16 2024Charts of the Week: Reversal of fortune
A Fed easing narrative has been re-energized over the past few days largely thanks to a slightly weaker than expected US CPI report this week but, more generally, because of a battery of weaker-than-expected US data over the past couple of weeks. In our charts this week we examine the latest Blue Chip survey of economic forecasters and the corresponding signals suggesting that the light is now shining a little less brightly on the US economy (see chart 1). The same survey suggests the outlook is shining a bit more brightly on Europe’s economies, albeit from a position of relative darkness, and as equally indicated by the GDP growth outcomes for Q1 2024 (Chart 2). Germany, however, continues to be a notable underperformer, which prompts us to examine the latest data on industrial production across several major euro area economies and the persistent evidence of underperformance (Chart 3). Next, we turn our attention to this week's UK labour market data, which increasingly suggest that this market is loosening (Chart 4). We then shift focus back to the US economy, highlighting one of the reasons for its relative strength in recent months —namely, higher levels of immigration (Chart 5). Finally, we address inflation issues, and specifically the relatively rapid pace of global food price inflation in recent years (Chart 6).
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
- of2726Go to 214 page









