Pantheon Macroeconomics

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Pantheon Publications

Below is a list of our Publications for the last 6 months. If you are looking for reports older than 6 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep.

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PANTHEON EM ASIA DATA WRAP 20 May 2024

Don’t hang your hat on Thailand’s market-beating Q1 GDP print
Malaysian export recovery still in play despite headline trade figures likely falling in May

Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

CHINA+ DATA WRAP 17 May 2024; China activity - retail sales slow

China activity - retail sales slow as industrial output rebounds; likely major property policy announcement due today

Duncan WrigleyChina+

PANTHEON EM ASIA DATA WRAP 17 May 2024

Improvement in Singaporean export growth down to base effects

Moorthy Krshnan (Senior Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

20 May 2024 US Monitor GDP growth is set to slow--but not collapse--squeezing down inflation

  • The lagged effect of tight credit and high rates is starting to bite; we're cutting our 2024 and 2025 forecasts.
  • The small business sector is under pressure, and consumers are starting to wobble.
  • Sustained slow growth will push unemployment up and inflation down; yields will drop, and stocks will struggle.

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

20 May 2024 LatAm Monitor Brazil's economy rebounds in Q1, but risks looming for H2

  • Brazil’s real GDP rebounded in Q1, thanks mainly to improving domestic demand, but risks loom for H2.
  • Fiscal challenges, a weakening external backdrop and bad weather conditions have clouded the outlook.
  • COPOM minutes reinforce the hawkish stance, despite a split vote, and cite fiscal risks to inflation.

Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Latin America

20 May 2024 Emerging Asia Monitor Singapore's export recovery looking increasingly anaemic

  • Base effects flattered Singaporean NODX growth in April, while real production is disappointing.
  • The long-running slide in urban unemployment in India appears finally to have stalled in Q1.
  • Remittances growth in the Philippines remains subpar; momentum is waning and the peso lift will fade.

Moorthy Krshnan (Senior Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

20 May 2024 China+ Monitor China's activity data mixed, ahead of incoming support policies

  • China’s April retail sales were hit by falling auto sales; the trade -in incentives should provide support.
  • Industrial output regained its vim in April, led by high-tech manufacturing.
  • Renewed government-bond issuance should restore infrastructure investment growth, after the April dip.

Duncan WrigleyChina+

20 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor Sticky services inflation still the key threat to the outlook for rates

  • EZ headline inflation held steady in April, matching the first estimate; core inflation fell slightly.
  • The near-term outlook for energy inflation has improved, but that will change if oil prices rebound.
  • Services inflation is as sticky as ever and will likely rebound in May; insurance inflation is rocketing.

Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

20 May 2024 UK Monitor Strong net trade in Q1 does not make GDP growth unsustainable

  • We are unconcerned by the strong net trade contribution to Q1 GDP growth.
  • Trade figures will be revised materially, and the Q1 contribution was offset by volatile stock-building.
  • Export volumes rose 1.3% quarter-to-quarter in Q1, excluding precious metals, erratics and oil.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

PM Datanote: US Jobless Claims / Philly Fed

Not definitive, but consistent with the idea that the trend is starting to rise.

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

PM Datanote: US Housing Starts, April

Recovery in housing construction running out of steam.

Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US

17 May 2024 China+ Monitor Japan's Q1 GDP dragged down by weaker domestic demand

  • Japan’s preliminary Q1 GDP surprised the market to the downside, with growth turning negative.
  • Weak domestic demand, such as business investment and consumption, was the culprit.
  • The sluggish growth does not warrant an early rate hike, as markets suggest; we stick to our Q4 call.

Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+

17 May 2024 US Monitor A real revival in the manufacturing sector still looks some way off

  • The manufacturing sector continues to disappoint and a sustained recovery still looks some way off. 
  • April's pick-up in import prices likely will have a near-zero impact on core goods CPI inflation.
  • The failure of housing starts and claims fully to reverse recent adverse shifts suggest interest rates are too high.

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

17 May 2024 Emerging Asia Monitor BSP's Remolona now believes our August rate-cut call is doable

  • The BSP yesterday left the target reverse repo rate at 6.50%, with its statement still sounding hawkish…
  • …But Governor Remolona was more dove than hawk, saying a rate cut in August is now possible.
  • The BSP cut its 2024 CPI forecast to 3.8%; it’s been behind the curve and can afford to shoot lower.

Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

17 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor EZ fiscal policy: will the best laid plans of governments go awry?

  • EZ fiscal policy is now consolidating but will remainmuch looser than before the pandemic.
  • We think the Italian government is too optimistic on its deficit-reduction this year, and until 2026 too.
  • The path for Germany’s fiscal position will depend on spending, while revenues matter most in France.

Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

17 May 2024 UK Monitor Sticking to June rate cut, as MPC words lately matter more than data

  • We expect the MPC to cut Bank Rate in June, as services inflation undershoots its forecasts.
  • The MPC’s words in any case signal the precise path of data is not that important for the first rate cut...
  • ... Data may matter more for subsequent changes, so robust wage growth will mean one cut per quarter.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

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