Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

    • Gasoline prices edge higher from three-week low.
    • Crude oil prices increase.
    • Natural gas prices decline.
  • German inflation accelerated in June rising by 0.7% month-to-month compared to falling 0.2% in May. The HICP core rate rose by 0.8% after a flat performance in May. The pattern for the HICP inflation rates in Germany’s domestic CPI headline and core, while showing similar trends to the HICP, also shows very different magnitudes. The German CPI accelerates to 0.3% in June after falling by 0.1% in May. The CPI excluding energy rose in June by 0.4% after being flat in May. The accelerations experienced in the domestic indexes month-to-month are far below the accelerations experienced in the HICP measure.

    Inflation diffusion as the arbiter The table calculates diffusion data based on the domestic CPI data. Diffusion data look across the various categories and calculate the breadth of the price increases period-to-period. The diffusion data presented in the table follow the practice for the U.S. ISM where diffusion is calculated as the percentage of inflation increases month-to-month plus half of the percentage that are unchanged. Inflation diffusion above 50% indicates that there is more acceleration than deceleration on the period. Below 50% there is more deceleration than acceleration across CPI categories. Inflation diffusion in April month-to-month was very narrow even though the headline showed that the domestic CPI rose by 0.1%; diffusion in April compared to March was only at 9.1%- extremely little inflation acceleration occurred in the month. However, diffusion stepped up sharply to 54.5% in May. This indicates inflation was accelerating in more categories than it was decelerated but by a very small margin. And this is even though, in May, the headline for inflation fell month-to-month after rising the month before. Essentially the diffusion calculation from May was saying that the headline exaggerated the beneficial trend for inflation. And that turns out to be true. In June we see the inflation metrics indicating a 0.3% headline gain and a 0.4% gain in the CPI excluding energy. But once again inflation diffusion remained at only 54.5%, barely showing inflation accelerating in more categories than it was decelerating. On balance, despite the headlines on the HICP, German domestic inflation data suggest that inflation is not increasing by much month-to-month. It sees June more as a hiccup in inflation. The HCP measure appears to be exaggerated. Supporting this view, Brent energy prices fell in each of the last two months as well.

    Sequential trends Sequential data that measure inflation over 12 months, 6 months and 3 months on the HICP shows that there is a steady deceleration of headline inflation from a 6.9% pace over 12 months to a 4.3% pace over 6 months to a 2.9% pace over 3 months. This deceleration is echoed by the HICP core measure.

    The German domestic CPI measure also shows inflation decelerating with the headlines displaying 6.4% inflation over 12 months, a 5.7% pace over 6 months, decelerating to 1.4% pace over 3 months. And like with the HICP core, the CPI excluding energy also shows inflation decelerating, in this case, from 6.7% over 12 months to a 4.9% pace over 6 months to a 2.1% annual rate over 3 months.

    Sequential diffusion Diffusion data are calculated from the domestic CPI data. They show inflation over 3 months with diffusion at 27.3%; this compares the 3-month inflation rates across CPI components to their performance over 6 months. Over 6 months diffusion is 36.4%; this measure compares 6-month inflation rates across components to component inflation over 12 months. Over 12 months the diffusion measure is hot, showing a 72.7% pace; this compares inflation by category over 12-months to what it was across components 12-months ago. Interestingly, the comparison of 12-months to 12-months ago shows a headline of 6.4% over 12 months as of June 2023; this compares to 6.6% twelve-months ago. The CPI ex-energy is at 6.7% over 12 months currently, compared to a 4.4% twelve-month pace twelve months ago. The diffusion measures confirm and reinforce the notion from the HICP headline and core and from CPI headline as well as ex-energy measure that inflation has been decelerating and that the deceleration is widespread.

    • Nonrevolving credit balances decline.
    • Revolving credit usage softens.
    • Inventories of durable goods increase, while those of nondurables decline.
    • Sales fall slightly as nondurable goods purchases weaken; durables sales rise.
    • Inventory-to-sales ratio edges higher.
  • The year-on-year trend depicted in the chart on Finland’s IP growth shows an erratic recovery. Finland’s IP nose-dived during Covid as IP did across the world. It similarly staged a strong post-Covid recovery. But after seeing growth peak early in 2022, the pace of output expansion has slowed steadily and even seen year-on-year results flash between logging expansion and contraction in recent months.

    In May output logs a 2.5% month-to-month gain after falling by 2.1% in April and rising 2.8% in March. But on the back of this monthly chop and year-on-year erratic behavior, the sequential growth rates are looking very solid, showing year-on-year output up by 1.2%, a gain at an 8.1% pace over 6 months then up to a 13.3% annual rate pace over 3 months. Still, IP excluding construction is only up at a 0.6% annual rate two months into Q2 2023. Manufacturing output is falling at a 1% annual rate in the unfolding second quarter as well - a complicating offset to sequential strength.

    Utilities output is accelerating and exploding sequentially culminating in a 97.7% annual rate of increase over 3 months. But mining & quarrying output is tanking – not in a clear decelerating profile - but still falling at a 65.7% annual rate over 3 months.

    Manufacturing shows sequential acceleration with output up 0.7% over 12 months, at a 3.6% pace over 6 months and at a 9.8% pace over 3 months. Still, both food-output and textile-output show weak performance.

    Finland’s HIPC gauge is in a clear decelerating pattern in what is a now also common global pattern. While it is joined by deceleration in the core HICP as well, the core pace is much more stubborn with the pace slowing to only a 4.2% annual rate over 3 months. The performance of the HICP headline and core also are quite different in each of the last three months.

    • Payroll gain follows downwardly revised May estimate.
    • Earnings growth remains stable.
    • Jobless rate eases as household employment rebounds.
  • Germany
    | Jul 07 2023

    German IP Falls by 0.2% in May

    German IP fell by 0.2% in May as manufacturing IP rose by 0.2%. Manufacturing and headline IP both show sequential deterioration in play for their annualized rates of growth from 12-months to 6-months to 3-months. Consumer goods and capital goods output both show secular growth rate deterioration while intermediate goods show only a very minor deviation from that same pattern.

    Real manufacturing orders and real sales both show more complex patterns.

    The IFO headline for manufacturing and the gauge for expectations both show secular improvement from 12-months to 6-months to 3-months. The ZEW current index shows persistent negative readings, but they show progressive improvement. The EU Commission industrial index shows secular deterioration.

    Other early European reporters show different results. France and Spain show ongoing sequential improvement in their output trends for IP. Portugal and Norway show sequential deterioration while Sweden shows a mixed pattern.

    There are 17 quarter-to-date calculations in the table. Ten of them show negative growth in progress. Overall, German IP, manufacturing IP and real German orders log negative readings for the quarter to date. The ZEW current treading, as well as France and Sweden, log positive readings along with two key German sectors: capital goods and consumer goods.

    Nine of 17 queue rankings show standings below their respective 50 percentile, a level that marks the median value for each series. The weakest percentile standings are for the intermediate goods sector for German manufacturing, the two IFO series (that are more upbeat- but from this lower ranking position) and IP in Portugal.

    Twelve of 17 measures show weaker conditions in May 2023 that existed in January 2020 before Covid struck.

  • Communications from central banks together with firmer-than-expected US labour market data have continued to suggest that monetary policy could remain tighter for longer in the period ahead. This, coupled with disappointing survey evidence this week, has magnified growth concerns in recent days in financial markets. In this week’s charts we focus on the expectations for central bank policy that can be derived from the July Blue Chip Financial Forecasts survey (in chart 1). We then delve into the specifics for Fed policy with a look at the shape of the US yield curve (in chart 2). Next, we shift our attention to inflation matters and specifically the negative surprises that characterise the incoming data from major developed and developing economies (in chart 3). That diminishing inflation threat finds an echo too in the underlying details of this week’s June ISM survey (in chart 4). It finds an echo as well, albeit not as loud, in the latest consumer expectations survey from the ECB (in chart 5) as well as the latest Q2 Tankan survey from Japan (in chart 6).