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Economy

Chinese industrial profit growth continues to shrink, down 2.3% ytd y/y in the first three quarters of 2022. The weakness is particularly pronounced among downstream sectors. Profits of manufacturers contracted by 13.2% ytd y/y while mining and quarrying…
Preliminary estimates indicate that German GDP growth accelerated by 0.3% q/q in Q3 from 0.1% q/q in Q2 and against expectations it would contract. The performance of the German economy is all the more notable that not only was it driven by consumption (CPI…
According to BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service, falling inflation will allow bond yields to decline in the major economies over the next few quarters. Structurally, however, a depletion of the global savings glut could put upward pressure on…
Preliminary estimates indicate that US GDP grew by an annualized 2.6% in Q3, following two consecutive quarters of negative growth, and beating expectations of 2.4%. Net exports, and to a lesser extent, consumption were the main contributors to Q3 GDP growth.…
According to our Emerging Markets strategists, Hungarian 10-year domestic bonds offer a good medium-term investment opportunity. The team believes that Hungarian growth has already peaked and is headed towards a recession. Given that exports make up a…
As expected, the ECB delivered another 75bp rate hike on Thursday. It also announced changes to the TLTRO terms and conditions – raising the borrowing costs of the facility, and offering banks an early repayment option. The market reaction suggests that…

Falling inflation will allow bond yields to decline in the major economies over the next few quarters. As such, we recommend that investors shift their duration stance from underweight to neutral over a 12 month-and-longer horizon and to overweight over a 6-month horizon. Structurally, however, a depletion of the global savings glut could put upward pressure on yields.

In Section I, we note that while recent inflation developments point to some supply-side and pandemic-related disinflation, they also point to potentially stickier inflation over the coming several months. The inflation, monetary policy, and geopolitical outlook remains sufficiently risky that an overweight stance towards equities within a global multi-asset portfolio is not justified, and we continue to recommend a neutral stance for now. This month’s Section II is a guest piece written by Martin Barnes. Martin, who retired from BCA Research as Chief Economist last year after a long and illustrious career, discusses the outlook for government debt and the possibility of an eventual crisis.

We recommend that investors use the following framework to think about whether potential disinflation would be bullish or bearish for share prices: disinflation will prove to be bullish for global share prices if it is due to an improvement in supply-side dynamics, but bearish if it is demand driven. We believe it is the latter.

It takes time for wage inflation to die. So, if 2022 was the year that central banks’ monster tightening killed bond and stock market valuations, then 2023 will be the year that it finally reaches the economy and kills profits, jobs, and the wage inflation that has so far refused to die. This means that commodity prices have substantial further downside, while healthcare relative performance has substantial further upside.