Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: November 2023

    • Smaller monthly deficit follows deepening during FY’23.

    • Revenues rise y/y as individual & corporate tax receipts strengthen.

    • Outlay growth resumes with broad-based increases

  • We move our attention this week to Indonesia, in light of its Q3 GDP readings released last week. The resource-rich economy is the largest in Southeast Asia and the fifth-largest in Asia by GDP, providing the bulk of the world’s nickel and palm oil supplies. Indonesia is also an important producer of other base metal and agricultural products including tin and natural rubber, and of energy commodities like coal. While slightly weaker, Indonesia’s Q3 GDP growth hovered near pre-pandemic rates, with private consumption once again the main growth driver. Delving deeper, we note continued weakness in Indonesia’s exports, which have been weighed by soft export prices despite relatively steady demand volumes. We then turn to examine Indonesia’s position as a minerals producer and its efforts – including outright export bans – to ascend the global minerals value chain. We next take stock of recent developments with the Indonesian rupiah and its relative resilience against the US dollar, noting stabilization support from the central bank. Lastly, we dive into the bank’s newly minted monetary policy tool aimed at attracting foreign inflows and discuss preliminary market responses and results.

    Indonesia’s Q3 performance Indonesia experienced slightly slower GDP growth in Q3, of 4.9% y/y, registering its first sub-5% growth reading in seven quarters (chart 1). The main support for Indonesia’s Q3 GDP growth stemmed from private consumption and gross capital formation, which collectively contributed to 4.7 percentage points of growth. Also, net exports provided a slight lift to growth, while government consumption exerted a mild drag.

  • Italian industrial production for manufacturing rose 0.1% in September after gaining 0.3% in August. These increases came after a 1.2% drop in July and they're still part of a sequence of continuously declining industrial production calculations over the past 12 months for Italy.

    Italian manufacturing production fell by 2.2% over 12 months; the pace of reduction has eased slightly to -1.5% over 6 months then it steps up to a decline at a 3.4% annual rate over 3 months. We see industrial production declining on all three timelines. The 3-month deterioration is at a faster rate than at 12-months, but over 6 months, there's an interruption in that deteriorating trend that makes the overall trend ambiguous.

    Consumer goods- Consumer goods production fell by 2.2% in September after rising 1.3% in August and falling 1.6% in July. The annual rate decline in consumer goods output is 6.8% over 12 months; that's reduced to a 4.7% declining pace over 6 months but then blows out to a decline of 9.5% at an annual rate over 3 months. This pattern echoes the overall pattern from manufacturing output on the same timeline.

    Capital goods- Capital goods output rose by 1.5% in September after output declined in August and July. Capital goods output shows a clear decelerating sequential trend, however. After rising 2.6% over 12 months, it reduces that to a 1.2% pace of increase over 6 months and then output declines at a 2% annual rate over three months.

    Intermediate goods- Intermediate goods output rises by 0.8% in September after falling 0.7% in August and falling 0.4% in July. Intermediate goods are the only category that shows that declines in output are occurring at a diminishing pace as output falls 2.8% over 12 months; that's reduced to a -1.4% rate over 6 months and reduced slightly further to a -1.2% annual rate over three months.

    Overall manufacturing goods production clearly is declining although the sequential patterns are not firmly established.

    Transportation- Trends for transportation equipment show deterioration although there's a strong gain of 6.1% in September compared to August. Output rises at an 11.7% annual rate over 12 months, and at a 5.9% annual rate over 6 months, but then falls sharply at an 8.6% annual rate over 3 months.

    Industrial measures Various industrial measures are presented at the bottom of the table including the EU industrial confidence measure, the Istat current orders and Istat outlook for production. In the most recent 3 months, there are nine of these observations and of these nine observations only one is positive and another is zero; the rest are negative, showing widespread weakness across these industrial metrics.

    The industrial metrics show persistent negative readings over 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months. But that generally is not a pattern of worsening deterioration. The industrial confidence measure and the Istat current orders measures both show readings that are less weak over 3 months than over 12 months although the Istat outlook for production metric is weaker over 3 months and over 12 months.

    Rankings Turning to the final column of the table, the rank standings show all these metrics are below their historic medians (that means below a ranking of 50%) except for capital goods output. Manufacturing industrial production has a 28-percentile standing, consumer goods output has an extremely weak 6-percentile standing, intermediate goods have a 31.6 percentile standing, while capital goods have a 60.7 percentile standing, above its historic median. For transportation output, there's also a reading that's above its 50-percentile at 69.5. However, the industrial measures at the bottom of the table have very weak standings for the most part with the EU industrial confidence measure having a standing just under its 20-percentile. The Istat outlook for production reading is at its 14.1 percentile and the Istat current orders reading is at its 37.3 percentile.

  • In a week that’s been sparse with market-moving data and central bank communications the focus in financial markets has shifted to the oil market. That’s largely because oil prices have declined to three-month lows, with Brent crude now around $80 a barrel. In our charts this week we take a look at broader commodity price trends in the past few weeks (chart 1) and then go onto examine how the normalisation of supply chain pressures in the world economy over the past few months has been contributing to the decline of inflationary pressures more generally (chart 2). Staying with inflation, we look next at the ECB’s latest consumer expectations survey and still-sticky inflation expectations in particular (chart 3). We turn next to China and the surprising weakness of its foreign direct investment inflows in Q3 (chart 4). We then turn our gaze to trade flows and specifically highlight the weakness of the UK’s export activity with EU (and non-EU) countries over the past few years (chart 5). Finally, we weigh in on the US economy with some perspective on the Fed’s Q4 senior loan survey and the still-weak indications this carries about credit demand (chart 6).

    • Principal & interest payments fall.
    • Mortgage rates rise further.
    • Median sales price of single-family home declines sharply.
    • Decline compares to upwardly revised level in the prior week.
    • Continuing claims continue to strengthen.
    • Insured unemployment rate holds steady.
  • Japan’s economy watchers survey has declined broadly in recent months, but recent weakness may overstate the degree of weakening present in the economy at this time.

    Japan’s economy watchers current reading, a diffusion index of assessments, dropped in October to 49.5, down from 49.9 in September and from 53.6 in August. The future index also slipped to 48.4 from 49.5 in September and 51.4 in August. Both the current and the future indexes are slipping, although the current index still has a queue standing in its 67th percentile, barely on the top one-third of values it has experienced since 2002. The future index has a queue standing at its 49th percentile which places it just below its historic median; queue standing statistics put the median at a standing value of 50%.

    The weakness in the indexes recently is quite striking with diffusion data shown at the bottom of the table. The monthly diffusion data calculate the proportion of indexes that are improved month-to-month. Diffusion values for October, September and for August all are at or below their 30th percentile indicating that even in the best month no current or future responses improved for more than 30% of the observations. This tells us that the deterioration is broad based over the last three months.

    The sequential calculations in this table look at point-to-point changes as well. Since these are diffusion data, there's no sense in trying to annualize these data; these are just point-to-point changes and diffusion data. For the current observations, we have a decline of -4.9 points over 3 months, -5.1 points over 6 months and -1.3 points over 12 months. The slippage over 12-months is relatively small; the slippage over 6 months is substantial and because there's a 4.9-point decline over 3 months we can see that most of that slippage has occurred in the last 3 months.

    The future index shows a decline of -5.7 points over 3 months, a decline of -7.3 points over 6 months and an increase of +1.3 points over 12 months. Expectations were slightly better over 12 months than they were a year ago. And once again the bulk of the slippage in this index has occurred over 3 months where 5.7 diffusion points are lost with only 1.6 diffusion points lost over the previous three months (to total -7.3 over six months).

    • Inventories of both durables & nondurable goods move up.
    • Sales continue to strengthen.
    • Inventory-to-sales ratio weakens significantly.