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Economy

This week we present our Portfolio Allocation Summary for February 2023.

The ISM PMI delivered a positive signal about service sector conditions in the US. The headline index jumped six points to 55.2 – returning to expansionary territory and beating expectations of a milder increase to 50.5. The details of the release were all…
The US Jobs report delivered good news about labor market conditions in January. The 517 thousand surge in nonfarm payrolls was nearly triple the anticipated 188 thousand gain and the largest monthly increase since July 2022. Increases in leisure &…
Some of the recent data have been less bleak about manufacturing conditions in Asia. In particular, at 38.3 in January, the New Export Orders index from the Taiwanese Manufacturing PMI is off its September 2022 low of 34.2. Similarly, the South Korean New…
According to BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy service, the demographic and property bust combined with US-China geopolitical competition have permanently damaged China’s growth potential. The year has started with several confirmations of the team’s…

This week, we articulate what the actions of the three major central banks that met (Fed, ECB and BoE) mean for currency markets. This is within the context of our analysis of the latest data releases in the G10, that allows us to calibrate currency strategy.

The risk-on rally is challenging our annual forecast so we are cutting some losses. But we still think central banks and geopolitics will combine to reverse the rally later this year.

Financial markets were taken on a wild ride between Wednesday and Friday of this week, with hugely important monetary policy meetings in the US, euro area and UK along with a rash of economic data. Despite all the news, noise and market volatility, the underlying message for monetary policy and bond yields in the US, euro area and UK is unchanged.

The ECB and the BoE provided a comforting signal to markets that the end of the respective tightening campaigns is coming before the summer. In the process, they are closing their hawkishness gap relative to the Fed.

The US economy will experience a period of benign disinflation over the next few quarters. Beyond this goldilocks period, either the economy will slip into a mild recession in 2024, or more ominously, a second wave of inflation will prompt the Fed to slam on the brakes, leading to a deep recession.