- Overall index rise softer than expected.
- Advance in core goods prices is steady.
- Advance in services price is steady.
U.S. PPI and Core PPI Gains Ease in December
More Commentaries
- USA| Jan 10 2025
Strong Payroll Report Signals Economic Resilience
- Widespread job gains in December.
- Jobless rate edges down.
- Earnings pressures ease.
- France| Jan 10 2025
French Retailing Shows Weakness
French retail sales volumes fell by 0.1% in November after falling by 0.1% in October; July was the last month to produce a month-to-month increase in retail sales volumes. In July 2024, those volumes increased by 0.2%. Sales volume trends in France continue to be weak.
Year-over-year growth rates for all products show a 0.1% decline in volume which has a 51.7 percentile rank on data back to mid-2007. Among the various categories, food purchases have a sub-50-percentile ranking as do electronics and the sales of new autos. These sub-50-percentile rankings indicate that the current year-over-year growth rates are below the median growth rate for year-over-year sales since mid-2007. It's unusual to see food rank so low; however, automobiles and electronics certainly count as discretionary purchases and if the economy is under pressure we would expect to see some weakness in electronics and in auto sales; that appears to be the case in France.
Other categories show sales rankings that range from firm-to-strong. Strong sales emerged in footwear, a small-ticket item, where an 84.2 percentile standing derives from a year-over-year growth rate of 7.2%. Household appliances, a heftier household expenditure, show a 5.1% increase in sales volumes for an 81.8 percentile standing, also a strong result. Furniture sales, where the growth rate is a milder 1.3%, still scores a 71.3 percentile standing for this period. Textile sales are up by 1.5% year-on-year, which scores an above-median 67-percentile standing. For all industrial goods, a 0.5% increase in spending marks a 56.5 percentile standing overall, a small gain above its historic median rate.
- Global| Jan 09 2025
Charts of the Week: Energy, Naturally
Investors have returned to focusing on several familiar themes so far this year. These include the resilience of the US economy compared with the rest of the world, the macroeconomic implications of a new US administration, simmering geopolitical tensions, and the productivity potential of AI. Inflation concerns have also been amplified in recent weeks, however, partly due to some firmer-than-expected inflation data, most notably in the US (see charts 1 and 2). Against that backdrop and fuelled by greater caution about the scope for easier monetary policy from the US Fed, expectations for the scale of US policy rate cuts in the year ahead have been significantly scaled back (chart 3). This adjustment, however, has not been fully mirrored in forecasts for policy rates in Europe (chart 4), partly due to the region’s more subdued growth outlook. In the background to these developments, energy price fluctuations continue to play a major role in shaping both cyclical gyrations and broader structural trends. It has certainly been no coincidence that inflation concerns have intensified at the same time as energy prices have been climbing. The US economy’s (and the US dollar’s) ongoing resilience relative to the rest of the world can also be attributed, in part, to the former’s energy trade surplus, which has been shielding it from instability stemming from global energy price shocks (charts 5 and 6).
by:Andrew Cates
|in:Economy in Brief
- Revolving credit has sizable November drop.
- Nonrevolving credit had sizable November advance.
- Germany| Jan 09 2025
German IP Rebounds in November, But Remains Weak
German industrial output advanced in November but is currently riding a string of 18 straight months of year-over-year declines for output excluding construction (the headline series).
The increase in monthly output marks ‘one in a row,’ two increases in the last four months, and three increases in the last six months. There have been six month-to-month increases in the last 12 months. Still, the year-on-year change is -2.8%, an improvement from drops of five-percent or so in September and October but August of 2024 showed a year-on-year drop of only 2.7%; yet, that was not a signal of coming improvement.
Apart from output itself, order momentum is not improving. Real manufacturing orders fell by 5.4% in November after falling by 1.5% in October, but that series has risen a strong 7.2% month-to-month in September. Real orders show a progression toward less decline over three months, six months, and 12 months. Still, the quarter-to-date annualized change in real orders is falling at a 7.1% annual rate.
On balance, it is hard to say that there is any light at the end of the tunnel for German output and its prospects based on IP trends or on real-order trends.
Sales trends are not much better although real sales rose by 1.4% in November; the decline over three months, six months and 12 months and have ‘generally’ been weakening.
Surveys show weakened trends from 12-months to 3-months.
In addition, the queue standings of all the IP categories, orders, real sales and the relevant German surveys have low standings- in all cases below 50%- putting all of them below their historic medians. The surveys are especially weak with standings below the 15th percentile in all cases. Among manufacturing output, real orders, and real sales the strongest standing is orders with a percentile of 33%. For the IP headline series itself, the standing is at its 18.4 percentile; consumer goods is strongest at a standing of 31.2%, with capital goods at 22% and intermediate goods at 17.4%. The readings for manufacturing in Germany are weak no matter how you view them.
The table also surveys early IP data for Portugal and Norway. These queue standings apply to year-on-year growth rates, and both are above the German standing of 18.4%, with Portugal at 39% and Norway at a 52.7 percentile standing above its historic median.
The far-right column also assesses the current IP level relative to where it stood on January 2020. The IP headline index is 12 IP index points lower. Construction is 13 index points lower; manufacturing as a total is 10.8 points lower, similar to the drops for real manufacturing orders and for real manufacturing sales. The surveys are on very different scales. The ZEW current index is 81.9 points lower, with the IFO manufacturing index lower by 8.8 points. Despite the difference in the construction of these indexes, these drops both have percentile standings in the 4% to 5% range. Skipping down the table, we quickly see Portugal has fallen by 9.9 IP points compared to its January 2020 level, while Norway has risen by 1.1 point and has an above-median standing, as a result.
These data are disappointing. Quite apart from the near-term momentum – which is weak- the big picture is severely impacted. And it is not getting better despite a small increase in the November output.
- USA| Jan 08 2025
U.S. ADP Payroll Gain Moderates in December
- Employment increase led by hiring in services.
- Wage gain for “job changers” stabilizes.
- Construction employment improves, while factory jobs decline.
- USA| Jan 08 2025
U.S. Unemployment Insurance Initial Claims in Jan. 4 Week Decrease to Lowest in Almost 2 Years
- Continuing claims did increase the prior week.
- Insured unemployment rate extends run at 1.2%.
- New Jersey has highest insured unemployment rate, while Florida’s is lowest.
- USA| Jan 08 2025
U.S. Mortgage Applications Declined in the First Week of January
- Applications to purchase dropped, while applications to refinance rose.
- Rates on 30-year fixed-rate loans were unchanged.
- Average loan size declined in latest week.
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