Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2024

  • In this week's letter, we look at a few more macroeconomic themes relating to Asia. We first analyse recent Asian currency performance, noting the Japanese yen’s weakness and the Indian rupee’s relative resilience in the face of a strengthening US dollar. We then examine the explanatory power of yield differentials for the respective performance of these currencies. We find that while yield differentials explain about half of the currencies’ returns variability, much remained unaccounted for, particularly in the case of the yen.

    We move next to study more localized issues within specific Asian economies. Starting with Japan, we discuss the recent slowdown in the growth of its monetary base and in its central bank’s government bond holdings in light of monetary policy moves. We also examine Japan’s latest Tankan survey results, which indicate diminished large manufacturer optimism, but elevated sentiment amongst large non-manufacturers. Moving to China, we take stock of developments in its electric vehicle market and investigate possible drivers of its recent sales slump, including seasonality and increased competition. Lastly, we explore South Korea’s latest exports numbers in the context of its broader relevance for global trade. We find that while headline export growth remains positive, underlying weakness exists when semiconductors – a major export component – is removed.

    Asian FX performance The US dollar has been on the front foot lately, with its strength spurred in part by some unwinding of Fed rate cut expectations. The strengthening has come to the detriment of Asian currencies, which have weakened on average by 3.5% against the dollar so far this year (Chart 1). The extent of Asian currency depreciation against the dollar has been varied, however, with the Japanese yen having weakened the most, while the Indian rupee has displayed relative resilience.

    • Latest job increase accelerates to quickest since last May.
    • Earnings increase moves up.
    • Jobless rate slips as employment jumps.
    • Revolving credit usage strengthens.
    • Nonrevolving credit growth slows.
  • Renewed concerns about the US Fed's inclination to lower interest rates in coming months have triggered broader anxiety in financial markets over the past few days. This week additionally revealed some data that have possibly tilted the balance of risks to the global economic outlook to the downside again. For example, latest trade data from South Korea offered tentative evidence to suggest the recent upswing in global trade is losing momentum (see chart 1). This week’s euro area flash CPI data, meanwhile, revealed stubbornly high levels of service sector inflation, raising doubts about the European Central Bank's willingness to lower interest rates in the immediate weeks ahead (chart 2). Latest data for US money market inflows also suggest a big role for liquidity in driving financial markets in recent months (chart 3). That potentially exposes those markets to some vulnerability should financial conditions tighten again in the near future. Still, not all of the global macro dataflow has been negative. On a more positive note, indicators of economic policy uncertainty have lately decreased to multi-month lows (see chart 4). US business formation has also been showing robust growth over the past few months, which has coincided with a big pickup in productivity (see chart 5). And finally, China's economy has unexpectedly accelerated over the past few weeks, possibly due to an increased pace of credit formation (see chart 6).

    • Exports and imports both increase.
    • Real goods trade deficit widens to seven-month high.
    • Goods trade deficits w/ China & Japan narrow.
    • Initial jobless claims highest since late January.
    • But continuing claims decrease somewhat in March 23 week.
    • Insured unemployment rate still holds at 1.2%.
  • The monthly view: The S&P composite PMIs in March show some continuing but slow improvement. The average for the 24 countries listed on the table moves up to 52.4 in March from 52.0 in February and 51.5 in January. The median moves up to 52.7 in March from 51.3 in February and 50.7 in January. Both the mean and the median progressions show ongoing improvement. Statistical agreement is a beautiful thing. The number of jurisdictions showing composite PMI values below 50 numbered 11 in January, fell to 9 in February, and to six in March. Fewer countries listed in this table are showing overall declining economic activity. In addition to that, few are showing a slowing tendency. Month-to-month changes show only 40% were slowing in January, only 32% were slowing in February, and only 44% of the reporters slowed in March compared to February. The monthly changes are constructive but not dramatic.

    Sequential profile: The sequential changes look at 12-month, to six-month, to three-month changes; they show that averages have risen from 51.6 for the overall, to 51.3 over six months - slightly weaker- and then advancing to 52.0 over three months. The median over 12 months is 51.7, that slips to 50.7 over six months and recovers to 51.8 over three months, just slightly above the 12-month average. Neither the average nor the median shows a steady progression towards improvement, but both show a slightly better reading over three months than over 12 months although the margins of improvement are small. The number of jurisdictions showing declining activity over 12 months is 8, that moves up to 10 over six months and down to 7 over three months. The number of jurisdictions growing slower was over half for 12-months and six-months; over 12 months at 65% slower, and even higher proportion of 78.3% showed slowing over six months compared to 12 months. Over three months, the proportion slowing pulls back sharply to only 34.8%. We see in these trends both the tendency for the PMI to show fewer declines and for the breadth of weakness to pull back over the past year.

    Queue standing- These improvements have had an impact on the queue standings as well. The average queue standing is now at 53.8% with the median at 55.1%. The medians for the composite PMIs are above 50% which means they're above their median values over the last four years. Out of the 24 reporters, only 11 jurisdictions show PMI standings below 50 which means below their median.

    The Weakest vs. the Strongest- The weakest standings in the table in March are standings in the 20th -percentile. Qatar, for example, registers a 20.4 percentile standing. Nigeria is at a 24.5 percentile standing. Germany has a 28.6 percentile standing, with France at a 30.6 percentile standing. The European Monetary Union has a 46.9 percentile standing. The United States has a 42.9 percentile standing. These data suggest that the improvement is not being driven by the large-developed economies. The highest percentile standing in the table belongs to India at the 98th percentile. Brazil has an 81.6 percentile standing. UAE reports an 87.8 percentile standing. Singapore has a 75.5 percentile standing and Japan notches a 73.5 percentile standing.

    • Job increase is strongest since July 2023.
    • Service-sector gain strengthens; construction improves.
    • Pay increase steadies.