Daily Economic Briefing: March 24, 2010
Daily Economic Briefing: March 24, 2010
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Page 1 of 3: March 24, 2010
• Our forecast calls for a temporary downshift
in global growth this quarter due in part to unusually harsh
winter weather in the US, Europe and parts of Asia. Global
growth is expected to pick up again in 2Q as the weather
normalizes and as latecomer Europe finally joins the
recovery.
•
• The recent global data flow
generally supports this forecast. Data and surveys clearly
show the imprint of weather in the current quarter. The
bounceback in these same sectors will boost 2Q growth.
Equally important, this week’s March business surveys
indicate that growth is picking up in Western Europe. There
are two sets of surveys coming out: the national business
sentiment surveys and the national PMIs. So far France,
Belgium and Germany have released their sentiment surveys;
each posted strong gains that lifted them to the highest
levels since mid-2008. This positive message was reinforced
by the Euro area PMI, which is our preferred indicator,
since it tracks activity rather than sentiment. After having
stalled the past few months, the PMI surged almost 2pts to
55.5, a level that we think is consistent with our 3% GDP
forecast for 2Q (q/q).
•
• One important aspect
of the rise in the Euro area PMI was the gain in services.
We have been concerned that the level of the services PMIs
is quite low globally, both outright and in relation to the
manufacturing PMIs Confirmation that the services PMIs are
now rising, seen in February in the US and UK and this month
in Europe, suggests that the base of the economic expansion
is broadening from the goods sector—where activity is
booming—to the rest of the economy. This development
signals the expansion is becoming more self-sustaining and
durable.
•
• Today’s US economic reports were
comparatively lackluster. New home sales fell 2.2%m/m in
February to an all-time low dating back to 1963. Weather
probably depressed sales but the underlying message is that
there has not been much of a recovery in home sales absent
the temporary pop induced by last year’s tax credit. The
report on February durable goods orders was more positive
yet not impressive: there are hints that the growth of core
orders, including for capex, is moderating, yet these data
are so volatile that we will need at least another month of
data to verify this is anything but noise.
•
• Japan’s real export volume (BoJ series)
rose over 1%m/m in February (25% on a 3m/3m, saar basis),
maintaining the impressive recovery (though export volume is
still 14% below the old high). Our team is considering
making a substantial upward revision to 1Q GDP growth,
pending next week’s reports.
•
Page 2 of 3: Services PMIs starting to kick into gear
One of the promising developments in
the recent business surveys has been the tentative sign that
the service-sector PMIs are starting to lift. These indexes
were recovering rapidly in 2009 alongside the manufacturing
PMIs. However, this process was jolted in late 2009, when
most services PMIs retreated even as the manufacturing PMIs
continued to advance. The divergence quickly produced a
record gap between our global services and manufacturing
PMIs.
Last month’s survey round suggested this divergence was starting to disappear. The US, UK and Japan service PMIs all moved up, producing a meaningful gain in the global index. The Euro area did not contribute, however. This changed with today’s reports, which showed that the Euro area flash services PMI registered a strong, 1.9pt increase in March. Assuming the other PMIs build on their February gains, our global services PMI will continue closing the gap with its manufacturing counterpart.
The import of this convergence—with the manufacturing PMI holding its ground while the service sector PMI is gaining—is that the recovery is becoming more broadly-based and self-sustaining. The broader base of demand growth can be seen sectorally, and also via the lens of the labor market, where more widespread production gains are prompting a shift toward job growth, as evidenced by the global PMI employment index and actual jobs data.
Page 3 of 3: Financial conditions limit 1Q downshift in growth
Global growth has downshifted this
quarter after a very strong performance in late 2009, partly
due to the effects of unusually severe winter weather in the
US, Europe and parts of Asia. We are now seeing signs that
these temporary effects are waning, pointing to an
acceleration in activity in the coming quarter. As discussed
above, we also see signs of increasing breadth, both
sectorally and regionally.
One very encouraging development is that through this period of growth and political uncertainty, global financial conditions have continued to ease, supporting the economic recovery. Stock prices are on track for a solid gain this quarter, while risk spreads have narrowed. One contributing factor is that global policymakers have signaled their intent to remain highly accommodative. This is particularly true in the developed economies, where core inflation is sliding.
To be sure, we need to remain on guard for an upset in the markets. The ongoing worries about sovereign debt, which may have contributed to the jump in Treasury yields today, could spill over more broadly into financial conditions. Separately, there is the ever-present risk that a surge in oil prices will undermine consumer spending in a period when labor markets are still fragile.
ENDS