Daily Economic Briefing: March 10, 2010
Daily Economic Briefing: March 10, 2010
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Page 1 of 2: Global data summary
• China trade flows were very strong in
February, with exports rising 4.8%m/m and imports rising
4.0%m/m. The increases compensate for unexpected declines in
January, leaving underlying growth on a very strong track.
It is curious that trade data from both China and Korea
contradict the expected pattern in which the Lunar New Year
holidays should have boosted January shipments at the
expense of February (for example, as seen in Taiwan’s
data). While China’s seasonally-adjusted exports surpassed
their previous all-time high in February, imports have risen
even more impressively. Thus, China’s trade surplus is
only about 2/3 the average reached in 2007-08, helping to
explain the continued reticence to permit currency
appreciation.
•
• Whereas the Lunar New Year
holidays have disrupted trade flows in Asia, it appears that
weather may explain the big export losses reported this week
by Germany and the UK for January. This appears to have been
less of a factor for production, meaning some output
intended for export went into inventory. Although UK output
fell in January, it rose strongly in Germany, France and
Italy. All told, it looks like Euro area factory output rose
1.5%m/m in January. This hints at a reacceleration in
manufacturing in 1Q, which will cushion the weather-induced
hit to construction activity.
•
• One factor
that is fueling the surge in global trade and industry is a
recovery in capital spending. We can track global capex
fairly accurately based on orders and shipments from the
major manufacturers in the G-3. With Japan reporting its
orders today, this closes the books on January. Our tally
shows that the underlying trend in G-3 orders growth remains
very strong, at 19% annualized (3m/3m), while shipments rose
at a 16% pace. Taken at face value, these data would point
to 15%-20% gains in global equipment spending in 4Q09 and
1Q10.
•
• The Bank of Thailand held its policy
rate at 1.25% today; however, its rhetoric turned more
hawkish, raising the odds of a hike in April (JPM: June) The
BoT clearly took note of BNM's recent hike as the statement
opened up referencing the beginning of monetary policy
normalization “in some countries”. In Norway, headline
inflation rose from 2.5%oya in January to 3.0% in February,
adding some pressure on the Norges Bank to tighten policy
later this month (JPM: +25bp).
•
• Today our
colleague Gabriel Casillas pushed back the expected onset of
Mexico’s tightening cycle from June to October. Despite
the recovery in the economy and headline inflation, Gabriel
made the change based on (1) benign reports on wage
negotiations; (2) well-anchored inflation expectations; and
(3) dovish comments from new central bank governor Agustín
Carstens.
•
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Page 2 of 2: Global auto sales remained elevated in Feb
Our global
proxy of auto sales—derived from 20 countries plus the
Euro area—moderated in February to 53mn units (saar) from
its all-time high of 54.2 the previous month. However, the
underlying message is that auto sales are holding in at
their recent elevated level—slightly above the
pre-recession high—despite the expiration of numerous
government auto sales incentives. (See Monday’s DEB for
more details on government incentives.)
As we have been highlighting, the bounceback in global auto sales owes largely to rapid growth in the EM, and in particular China. Indeed, China accounts for more than half of the total global 2009-2010 rebound with current sales that are roughly twice their pre-recession pace. Other EM countries—including Brazil, India, and Korea have also experienced rapid auto sales growth (albeit more moderate than in China) and are similarly at levels well above their pre-recession pace.
Auto sales in developed markets (DM) have also improved considerably from their 2008-2009 troughs; however, the recovery has not been as strong as in the EM. In particular, US sales remain extremely depressed compared to the typical pace over the last expansion. Elsewhere in the DM, auto sales generally did not fall as much, thanks partly to the earlier rollout of government auto incentives that were in effect for most of 2009.
We are encouraged by the resiliency of auto sales this year in the face of expiring government incentive programs. However, as discussed in the aforementioned DEB, it is still too early to determine the ultimate impact of these schemes on sales. Incentives in several countries have only just expired, and several others will end after March. Therefore, it will take time for a “clean” incentives-free trend to emerge. Further, a great deal of the recent surge in auto sales is due to China, which extended auto sales benefits through the end of 2010.
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