Eurozone GDP rose 0.1% qoq in Q1, EU up 0.3 qoq

    Eurozone GDP grew 0.1% qoq in Q1, matched expectations. EU GDP rose 0.3% qoq.

    Among the Member States for which data are available for the first quarter of 2023, Portugal (+1.6%) recorded the highest increase compared to the previous quarter, followed by Spain, Italy and Latvia (all +0.5%). Declines were recorded in Ireland (-2.7%) as well as in Austria (-0.3%). The year-on-year growth rates were positive for all countries except for Germany (-0.1%).

    Full Eurozone GDP release here.

    AUD/NZD falling back towards 1.0672 after RBA

      AUD/NZD falls notably after RBA announced to leave interest rates unchanged. Yesterday’s rebound was primarily driven by speculation of a hawkish surprise from RBA. However, with RBA’s decision now public, market focus shifts to RBNZ upcoming rate hike and whether the statement would be hawkish enough to push AUD/NZD below 1.0672 short-term bottom.

      From a technical perspective, the near-term outlook for AUD/NZD remains bearish as the 1.0802 resistance level remains intact, further supported by the currency pair’s rejection by the 55 day EMA. The decline from 1.1085 is expected to resume sooner rather than later, and a firm break below 1.0672 level would confirm resumption of the fall. This could ultimately lead the currency pair towards 61.8% projection of 1.1085 to 1.0672 from 1.0789 at 1.0534.

      UK GDP grew 0.2% in three months to May. Modest, driven by services

        UK GDP rose grew 0.3% mom in May and 0.2% in the three months to May.

        Growth were drive by Services with 0.34% growth in the rolling quarter. Production dropped -0.08% while construction dropped -0.10%.

        Head of National Accounts Rob Kent-Smith said in the release:

        “The first of our new rolling estimates of GDP shows a mixed picture of the UK economy with modest growth driven by the services sector, partly offset by falling construction and industrial output.

        “Retailing, computer programming and legal services all performed strongly in the three months to May while housebuilding and manufacturing both contracted.

        Services, in particular, grew robustly in May with retailers enjoying a double boost from the warm weather and the royal wedding. Construction also saw a return to growth after a weak couple of months.”.

        Full UK GDP release.

        Also from UK:

        • Visible trade deficit was unchanged at GBP -12.4B in May.
        • Industrial production dropped -0.4% mom, rose 0.8% yoy. Manufacturing production rose 0.4% mom, 1.1% yoy.
        • Construction output rose 2.9% mom.

        Eurozone industrial production down -1.1% mom in Dec, EU down -0.4% mom

          Eurozone industrial production declined -1.1% mom in December, worse than expectation of -0.8% mom. Production of intermediate goods fell by -2.8%, durable consumer goods by -1.4%, non-durable consumer goods by -1.0% and capital goods by -0.4%, while production of energy grew by 1.3%.

          EU industrial production dropped -0.4% mom. Among Member States for which data are available, the largest monthly decreases were registered in Ireland (-8.5%), Luxembourg (-5.2%) and Lithuania (-4.0%). The highest increases were observed in Denmark (+13.5%), Portugal (+4.1%) and Hungary (+3.8%).

          Full release here.

          EU downgrades 2021 GDP forecast, second wave dashes hope for quick rebound

            In the Autumn European Economic Forecast, European Commission revised up 2020 GDP projection to -7.8% contraction (up from -8.7%). Though, 2021 GDP growth projection was revised down to 4.2% (form 6.1%). Growth is projected to slow further to 3.0% in 2022. Inflation projection was left unchanged at 0.3% for 2020 and 1.1% for 2021. Inflation is expected to climb further to 1.3% in 2022. Unemployment rate is projected to be at 8.3% in 2020, 9.4% in 2021 and 8.9% at 2022.

            Valdis Dombrovskis, Executive Vice-President for an Economy that Works for People, said: “This forecast comes as a second wave of the pandemic is unleashing yet more uncertainty and dashing our hopes for a quick rebound. EU economic output will not return to pre-pandemic levels by 2022.”

            Paolo Gentiloni, Commissioner for Economy, said: “After the deepest recession in EU history in the first half of this year and a very strong upswing in the summer, Europe’s rebound has been interrupted due to the resurgence in COVID-19 cases. Growth will return in 2021 but it will be two years until the European economy comes close to regaining its pre-pandemic level. In the current context of very high uncertainty, national economic and fiscal policies must remain supportive, while NextGenerationEU must be finalised this year and effectively rolled out in the first half of 2021.”

            Full report here.

            Fed Daly ready for tapering by the end of the year or early next

              San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said in a PBS interview, she didn’t expect the Delta variant to “derail recovery” in the US. nevertheless, “it’s already very seriously interrupting the recoveries in the global economy,” which is a “headwind on US growth.

              She’s looking for “continued progress in the labor market, continued putting COVID behind us, rising vaccination rates, the things that are so fundamental to us saying that the economy has achieved that metric of substantial further progress.”

              Right now, her modal outlook is that “we will achieve that metric later this year or early next”. And, “we will do something on the asset front, asset purchase tapering, by the end of this year or early next.”

              Full interview here.

              European update: Dollar trying to strike back, except vs Yen and Aussie

                After the Fed Powell triggered selloff yesterday, Dollar is trying to regain some ground in US session. Nevertheless, it’s underperforming both Yen and Aussie. Main focus will turn to minutes of November meeting later in the day. Of particular interest, everyone would like to see how “close” the current interest rate is to neutral, in policymakers mind. That is, did most FOMC members thought interest rates were now “just below” neutral? Or they believe it’s “long way from” neutral?

                There are some rumors/reports flying around in European session, which don’t carry much significance. EU Commissioner Günther Oettinger  was quoted by WiWo expecting US auto tariffs to come before Christmas. While Euro trade slightly below Dollar, Yen and Aussie, it’s up against all others. We can’t really say that Euro drops on tariff worries. (European Commission just denied the report)

                Staying in the currency markets, Sterling is the weakest one for today as UK steps closer to parliamentary vote of the Brexit deal. Swiss Franc is the second weakest after data GDP Q3 GDP unexpectedly contracted. Canadian is the third weakest as WTI crude oil drops below 50.

                In other markets, major European index trade slightly higher. At the time of writing:

                • FTSE is up 0.39%
                • DAX is up 0.19%
                • CAC is up 0.44%
                • German 10 year yield is down -0.0191 at 0.333
                • Italian 10 year yield is down -0.0189 at 3.242. Spread stays below 300.

                Earlier in Asia

                • Nikkei rose 0.39% to 22262.60
                • Singapore Strait Times rose 0.48% to 3109.44
                • But Hong Kong HSI closed down -0.87% at 26451.03
                • Shanghai SSE dropped -1.32% to 2567.44. It’s a factor still capping AUD/USD at around 0.7314 resistance.

                Canada employment dropped -213k in Jan, unemployment rate surged to 9.4%

                  Canada employment dropped -213k, or -2.12% in January, much worse than expectation of -43.5k. “Losses were entirely in part-time work and were concentrated in the Quebec and Ontario retail trade sectors.”

                  Unemployment rate surged to 9.4%, well above expectation of 8.9%. That’s also the higest level since August 2020.

                  Full release here.

                  Trump rejected non-existent meeting request of Trudeau, launched fresh personal attacks

                    Trump “claimed” he rejected one-on-one meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on trade. Additionally, Trump launched fresh personal attacks on both Trudeau and the Canadian team. In response, Trudeau shouldered it and pledged to continue work for a good deal for Canada, but be prepared to walk away.

                    Trump said he turned out the meeting request because “his tariffs are too high, and he doesn’t seem to want to move”, referring to Trudeau apparently. Trump repeated his threat and said “forget about it and frankly we’re just thinking about just taxing cars coming in from Canada”. He stepped up further and said “that’s the motherlode, that’s the big one.”

                    Additionally, Trump added that “We’re very unhappy with the negotiations and the negotiating style of Canada. We don’t like their representative very much. That’s another personal attack on apparently on Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland.

                    Trudeau spokeswoman Chantal Gagnon said: “No meeting was requested. We don’t have any comment beyond that.” Trudeau himself reiterated “we will keep working as long as it takes to get to the right deal for Canada.” He also emphasized Canada would need to feel confident “about the path forward as we move forward – if we do – on a NAFTA 2.0.”

                    It’s now clearly more likely then not the Canada-US NAFTA negotiation will slip the US imposed deadline of October 1. It’s reported that the US could publish the text of the agreement with Mexico on Thursday or Friday and move on with the process, without Canada.

                    Australia NAB business confidence unchanged at -1, more RBA support still needed

                      Australia NAB Business Confidence was unchanged at -1 in Q4. Current Business Conditions, improved from 2 to 4. However, Business Conditions for the next three months dropped from 10 to 9, for the next 12 months dropped from 20 to 16.

                      Alan Oster, NAB Group Chief Economist: “The survey broadly fits with our overall read of the economy. A weak private sector – particularly in the consumer space and only modest inflation pressure. There also appears some risk around the outlook for the labour market and business investment. We think more policy support is needed and that this is still likely to occur in 2020, but for now the RBA appears in wait and see mode with labour market conditions still faring well”.

                      Full release here.

                      WH Kudlow: Powell is safe at the present time

                        White House National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow reiterated his view that Fed can “take back” its December rate hike. Also, he urged Fed to look at low inflation data, rather than strong job data in deciding the rate cut.

                        Meanwhile, Kudlow also noted Trump is making “no effort” to remove Fed Chair Jerome Powell. And, “at the present time, yes he is safe”.

                        Separately, Powell delivered opening remarks at “Stress Testing: A Discussion and Review,” a Boston Fed research conference. But he didn’t talk about monetary policy. Focus will turn to his two-day semiannual Congressional Testimony, which starts tomorrow.

                        Australia Westpac leading index improved slightly in Feb

                          Australia Westpac-MI leading index improved slightly from -0.50% to -0.25% in February. But Westpac is expecting “strong above trend growth in 2022”, largely due to the aftermath of the extraordinary emergency policy measures from both the fiscal and monetary authorities during 2020 and 2021.

                          Westpac expects RBA to stand pat in April meeting with its “patience” stance. But after Q1 inflation data and further progress on wages growth, RBA would moving to a tightening bias over June and July, prior to raising the cash rate in August.

                          Full release here.

                          US ADP jobs grew 517k, strongest since last Sep

                            US ADP employment grew 517k in March, below expectation of 550k. By company size, small businesses added 174k jobs, medium businesses added 188k, large businesses added 155k. By sector, goods-producing jobs grew 80k, service-providing grew 437k.

                            “We saw marked improvement in March’s labor market data, reporting the strongest gain since September 2020,” said Nela Richardson, chief economist, ADP. “Job growth in the service sector significantly outpaced its recent monthly average, led with notable increase by the leisure and hospitality industry. This sector has the most opportunity to improve as the economy continues to gradually reopen and the vaccine is made more widely available. We are continuing to keep a close watch on the hardest hit sectors but the groundwork is being laid for a further boost in the monthly pace of hiring in the months ahead.”

                            Full release here.

                            Germany Scholz can’t say we are over the worst yet

                              Germany’s Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said that economic situation is “quite serious” in Europe. Hence, it is “important in the second half of the year to tackle the serious recession we are experiencing.”

                              “Current indicators give us hope that we will have a good recovery,” he acknowledged. “But these developments are still quite precarious and I can’t say we are over the worst of it yet.”

                              He added that Germany’s focus over the coming months would be to complete the set up of the EUR 750B recovery package, and EU’s long term budget of EUR 1.074T.

                              Fed Mester: Reopen very carefully, no one wants to go backwards

                                Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said “the economic data is very ugly reflecting the shutdown in the activity, furloughs and layoffs,” due to coronavirus pandemic. “Fed is working to help markets function and support businesses so they can be ready when economy reopen”, She said. “It will take some time for the economy to pick back up and the Fed is trying to limit the economic damage.”

                                Mester also support the idea of reopening the economy in stages. She emphasized, “no one wants to go backwards. Everyone wants to kind of get back to work but everyone realizes that how you do that really has to be done very carefully.”

                                Separately, New York Fed President John Williams said there will be “a lot of economic pain” and “that’s likely to continue for some time”. He added, “I still think we’ve got some tough days ahead and that’s why we’re working so hard to support the economy during this period.”

                                CAD rebounds after BoC stands pat, cautious but no dovish turn

                                  Canadian Dollar rebounds after BoC stands pat but doesn’t turn particularly dovish in the statement. The overnight rate target is held at 1.75%. BoC warned that “escalating trade conflicts and related uncertainty are taking a toll on the global and Canadian economies.” Thus, the “current degree of monetary policy stimulus remains appropriate”. The central bank said as it works to upside economic projections, particular attention will be paid to “global developments and their impact”.

                                  On the economy, BoC noted that Q2 was “strong and exceeded” expectation, even though some of this strength is “expected to be temporary”. However, consumption spending was unexpected soft in the quarter while business investment contracted sharply after Q1. “Given this composition of growth, the Bank expects economic activity to slow in the second half of the year.” July CPI was stronger than expected but “largely because of temporary factors”.

                                  Full statement below.

                                  Bank of Canada maintains overnight rate target at 1 ¾ percent

                                  The Bank of Canada today maintained its target for the overnight rate at 1 ¾ percent. The Bank Rate is correspondingly 2 percent and the deposit rate is 1 ½ percent.

                                  As the US-China trade conflict has escalated, world trade has contracted and business investment has weakened. This is weighing more heavily on global economic momentum than the Bank had projected in its July Monetary Policy Report (MPR). Meanwhile, growth in the United States has moderated but remains solid, supported by consumer and government spending. Commodity prices have drifted down as concerns about global growth prospects have increased. These concerns, combined with policy responses by some central banks, have pushed bond yields to historic lows and inverted yield curves in a number of economies, including Canada.

                                  In Canada, growth in the second quarter was strong and exceeded the Bank’s July expectation, although some of this strength is expected to be temporary. The rebound was driven by stronger energy production and robust export growth, both recovering from very weak performance in the first quarter. Housing activity has regained strength more quickly than expected as resales and housing starts catch up to underlying demand, supported by lower mortgage rates. This could add to already-high household debt levels, although mortgage underwriting rules should help to contain the buildup of vulnerabilities. Wages have picked up further, boosting labour income, yet consumption spending was unexpectedly soft in the quarter. Business investment contracted sharply after a strong first quarter, amid heightened trade uncertainty. Given this composition of growth, the Bank expects economic activity to slow in the second half of the year.

                                  Inflation is at the 2 percent target. CPI inflation in July was stronger than expected, largely because of temporary factors. These include higher prices for air travel, mobile phones, and some food items, which are offsetting the effects of lower gasoline prices. Measures of core inflation all remain around 2 percent.

                                  In sum, Canada’s economy is operating close to potential and inflation is on target. However, escalating trade conflicts and related uncertainty are taking a toll on the global and Canadian economies. In this context, the current degree of monetary policy stimulus remains appropriate. As the Bank works to update its projection in light of incoming data, Governing Council will pay particular attention to global developments and their impact on the outlook for Canadian growth and inflation.

                                  Fed Daly: Recent rise in inflation compensation is encouraging

                                    San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said in a speech that “a swell of market and academic commentary has started to emerge about a quick snapback, an undesirable pickup in inflation, and the need for the Federal Reserve to withdraw accommodation more quickly than expected”.

                                    But that was only “reaction to a memory of high and rising inflation, an inexorable link between unemployment, wages and prices, and a Federal Reserve that once fell behind the policy curve”. She added, “the world today is different”.

                                    She viewed “recent rise in inflation compensation to roughly 2 percent as encouraging and in line with our stated goals. It suggests that our commitment to flexible average inflation targeting has already gained substantial credibility.”

                                    “Today, the costs are tilted the other way. Running inflation too low for too long can pull down inflation expectations, reduce policy space, and leave millions of Americans on the sidelines along the way.”

                                    Full speech here.

                                    ECB Lane: We need another 50 basis points in March

                                      ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane said in an interview, “our assessment of December remains solid, that we needed a sequence of 50 basis point hikes to bring us inside a zone where we would need to think harder about whether rates are sufficiently restrictive to deliver the return of inflation to 2%.

                                      “The data flow since then suggests that the assessment is solid, that we need another 50 basis points in March,” he said.

                                      Beyond March, “the overall philosophy is that we will bring rates to a level that is sufficiently restrictive, which depends on where the inflation forecast is, where we are with underlying inflation and where we are with the monetary transmission mechanism.”

                                      “There is a zone of interest rate paths that the Governing Council will have to assess in March, in May and thereafter, and determine where in that zone we want to be,” he added.

                                      Without commenting on whether rate will stay at a significantly long plateau, Lane said “I absolutely sign up to the monetary policy philosophy that wherever we get to, we should be slow to come down until we have very strong evidence – not just in the forecast but also in our ongoing assessment of underlying inflation – that we are returning inflation to target.”

                                      Full interview here.

                                      Philly Fed manufacturing business outlook jumped to 17

                                        Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Business Outlook jumped to 17.0 in January, up from revised 2.4 in December, beat expectation of 3.7. The percentage of the firms reporting increases (39 percent) was greater than the percentage reporting decreases (22 percent).

                                        All of the survey’s broad indicators remained positive and increased from their readings in December. The survey’s future indexes indicate that respondents continue to expect growth over the next six months.

                                        Full release here.

                                        UK May has faithfully and firmly reflected backstop concerns to EU, Brexit deal vote again in week of Jan 14

                                          UK Prime Minister Theresa May told MPs that she has “faithfully and firmly” reflected the Commons’ concerns about the Irish border backstop to EU. And she described some of the exchanges with EU leaders as being “robust”. She added that “but I make no apology for standing up for the interests of this house and for the whole of the United Kingdom.

                                          Nevertheless, May also repeated what the EU has said. That is, EU hoped that the backstop would not be triggered. And even if the backstop was used, it should be temporary. May also mentioned that French President Emmanuel Macron said no one is trying to lock up the UK to the backstop. Though, May also said further discussions will take place with the EU.

                                          On the timing of the vote, May said debate on the Brexit deal with resume in the week beginning Monday January 7. Vote will be held in the following week, that is, the week beginning January 14.