- Largest increase in four months; largest increase in revolving credit since March 2022.
- Nonrevolving credit remained depressed with smallest increase in three months.
- USA| May 05 2023
U.S. Consumer Credit Picked Up in March
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- Canada| May 05 2023
North American Jobs Trends Continue Strong
Jobs in Canada rose by 41,400 in April, an acceleration from the approximately 35,000 gain made back in March. This compares to a gain of 21,800 in February and it shows acceleration in overall employment growth on that timeline. On a broader timeline that looks at average gains over 12 months, versus six-months and versus three months, we find gains accelerate over 6-months compared to 12-months, then decelerate over three-months compared to 6-months.
Looking at month-to-month changes, job growth across sectors, and major groupings, accelerates from February to March and from March to April. And although job growth overall does not accelerate on a broader timeline, job diffusion shows that the breadth of accelerations improved from 12-months to 6-months, to 3-months. That means it accelerated in an increasing proportion of categories.
Canada, much like the U.S., with an inflation problem, and a central bank that is hiking rates, has a resilient labor market.
The Canadian unemployment rate at 5% in April is unchanged for five months in a row and that unemployment rate is tied for the seventh lowest unemployment rate on data back to 1990. Canada’s unemployment rate hit is low on this timeline of 4.9% in June and July of 2022. On this timeline, the Canadian unemployment rate has been this low or lower only 1.5% of the time.
Jobs in Canada accelerate steadily only in the transportation sector looking at changes over 12-months to six-months to three-months. However, there are slowing job gains sequentially for the goods sector, in construction, and for professional and technical workers.
While job market aggregates in Canada remain strong, there clearly is also some evidence of softening as we certainly would expect given the inflation overshoot and the actions by the Bank of Canada to try to rein inflation back in.
Canada's labor force participation rate at 65.6% in April is unchanged from March and only slightly lower than it was in February 2023. The overall rate continues to cruise slightly below its pre-COVID pace when the participation rate was as high as 66.1%.
Global| May 05 2023
Charts of the Week (May 5, 2023)
The spotlight has been on the Fed and the ECB over the past few days with investors keen to hear some hints that an interest rate tightening cycle is close to completion. Notwithstanding further hikes of 25bps from both central banks, that certainly seemed to be a takeaway from the Fed judging by Chairman Powell’s post-meeting comments and the financial market response. Incoming economic data have been flagging downside growth risks over the past week or so and this has given cover for US policymakers to communicate a policy pause. But those growth risks combined with heightened financial stability concerns, still-high inflation, and arguably sanguine market pricing (e.g. in credit) underscore how difficult the calibration of monetary policy has become. Against this backdrop our charts this week home in on consensus forecasts for policy rates over the next 12 months (in chart 1) and the heightened US recession risks that recent surveys have been signalling (in chart 2). A more upbeat view about the US economy is, nevertheless, being signalled by this week’s labour market reports, one of which we additionally illustrate (in chart 3). As for Europe, much of this week’s data has been more damning for the economic outlook which we underscore via the ECB’s latest Q2 bank lending survey (in chart 4). On the inflation front we then focus on the disinflationary messages for traded goods prices that can be heeded from China’s latest manufacturing PMI survey (in chart 5). Finally, with oil prices falling sharply in recent days, we look at the tight relationship between global energy prices and core CPI inflation (in chart 6).
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 04 2023
U.S. Trade Deficit Narrows in March
- Deficit is lowest in four months.
- Exports strengthen while imports ease.
- Goods trade deficit shrinks; services surplus steadies.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 04 2023
U.S. Productivity Turns Down in Q1
- Output barely rises in Q1.
- Hours worked advance at a 3.0% pace.
- Manufacturing productivity declines outright.
- USA| May 04 2023
U.S. Initial Claims for Unemployment Insurance Rise
- Initial claims remain higher than January.
- Continuing claims ease.
- Insured unemployment rate declines.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
Global| May 04 2023
Service Sectors Support Global Composite PMI Firmness
The average unweighted composite PMI readings from S&P Global for April show another monthly increase as the average ticks up to 51.5 from 50.5. The median moved up to 53.8 in April from 52.8 in March.
Small, if against the grain, changes The movement in the various series are small; however, what is striking is that they are movements against the grain at a time that inflation is high and central banks are still raising interest rates – and have been doing so for some time. Just yesterday, the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates and today the ECB put in another rate hike on top of its rate profile. In both cases, inflation is still well above their targets and only now is the U.S. short-term interest rate starting to be on an even-keel or slightly higher than the major inflation indexes used to gauge inflation in the U.S.
Resilience or bad analytics? The perception that economies have been resilient in the face of rate hiking is a perception that comes largely from the fact that rate hikes have gone on for such a long time. In the case of the U.S., it's a record increase of interest rates in this rate hike cycle. While, on the face of it, that sounds impressive, the fact of the matter is simply that the U.S. had allowed itself to get so far behind the inflation rate when it rose, that it has taken a record run of rate increases to get the federal funds rate marginally above the trailing 12-month rate of inflation… on a few measures. And the ECB is not there yet. So, people who like to look at rate increases and gnash their teeth over how the market is performing, and growth has endured, have been somewhere between surprised and disturbed at economic resilience. But, if you're the kind of person who looks at the levels of real interest rates relative to inflation, then you have understood what's been going on and why there's nothing particularly remarkable about this. Even so, it's surprising that as central banks, the Fed in particular, have taken away stimulus - even though rates haven't really gotten to a restrictive mark - growth has held up as well as it has.
A unique paradigm It is difficult to compare these times to any other times because the world's economies are so much on the same cycle because of COVID having struck. COVID struck all countries that about the same time and from that point countries have had slightly different experiences with their economic recoveries, but all of them are recovering from the same sort of shock not so much from the disease but from the policies that were pursued to try to contain the disease.
So… how good is growth? To assess the global PMI data, please shift over to the right-hand column; it shows very moderate queue percentile standings. The average standing is at the 63rd percentile with the median at a 69th percentile standing. Percentile standings place the current observation for each economic unit in the queue of data from January 2019 to date. The queue percentile expresses the position of the current observation in that queue of data. On this metric, the median for the period occurs at a ranking of 50%. So, these rankings this month are ‘firm’ rankings of 63% in standing, 13 percentage points above the median which means that 13% of the observations lie between the median and the current value. It also means that the highest value lies some 37% above the current value. In contrast, the range percentiles position the current observation between the highest and lowest values of the period expressing the current reading as a percentile of the high-low range.
Momentum Momentum is also telling, and we see a big difference between what's happening in the last few months and the broader trends. In the current month of April, there are only five out of twenty-five jurisdictions that show slowing; this compares to nine in March and five in February. In April, there are only four jurisdictions with PMI values below 50 (where PMI diffusion values say activity is contracting); there were only six in March and only six in February. Looking at averages over three months, we get similar sorts of statistics with five jurisdictions below 50 and five jurisdictions that are slowing. But over six months, eight of the twenty-five jurisdictions are below 50 and fourteen of twenty-five are slowing. Over 12 months compared to 12-months ago, there are seventeen jurisdictions that are slowing and six with PMI values below 50.
- USA| May 03 2023
FOMC Raises Fed Funds Rate to 16-year High
- The FOMC raised the federal funds rate target by 25 basis points to a range of 5.00%-5.25%.
- This is the highest funds rate target since July 2007.
- All members of the FOMC voted in favor of today’s decision.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
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