Pantheon Publications
Below is a list of our Publications for the last 5 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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Daily Monitor Meekita Gupta (Asia Economist)
- Taiwan’s exports soared by 69.9% in January, with AI demand still overwhelming supply…
- ...though base effects, Lunar New Year distortion and less front-loading point to cooling ahead.
- AI demand could soften near term, due to lack of data centre readiness and delayed deployment.
- Taiwan’s Q4 GDP growth surged to a blockbuster 12.7%, above the unjustifiable 8.8% consensus...
- …Exports did the heavy lifting, though even we were taken aback by the rebound in consumption.
- The MAS held policy steady; we see little need for tightening with imported inflation still non-existent.
- BNM held the OPR at 2.75% yesterday, in line with expectations, prolonging its ongoing pause.
- For now, AI-driven export strength should continue, meaning no rate cuts in 2026.
- Subdued inflation should leave the door open to a rate cut in the event of an economic shock.
- Malaysian exports blew past expectations in December; analysts underestimated the AI boom...
- …We have upgraded our 2026 GDP forecast, as we think AI demand will remain firm for some time.
- Malaysia’s inflation ticked up in December, but we consider this a one-off not a re-acceleration.
- Singapore ended 2025 strongly, with GDP growth accelerating to 5.7% in Q4, from 4.3% in Q3.
- Manufacturing drove the uptick, led by pharmaceuticals and electronics exports…
- …We think the headline was inflated by tariff-related front-loading that could fade in coming quarters.
- Taiwan’s exports exploded by 56% in November, far above expectations, driven by AI server demand…
- …We are now upgrading our Q4 GDP growth forecast to 12.0%, the highest this millennium.
- Philippine sales volumes continue to slump; only so much borrowing and remittances can do.
- Early signs suggest there could be a moderation in Malaysia’s Q4 GDP, but risks are to the upside.
- In the longer term, supply side factors are likely to weigh on growth, due to poor capital stock growth.
- That said, we see the government pulling numerous policy levers to raise this.
- Taiwan’s exports hit a record $61.8B in October, up 49.7% yearly, driven by surging AI and US demand.
- Investors are more uneasy as Big Tech firms ramp up AI-related capex, shifting to debt financing…
- …A correction in tech valuations could ensue, which would culminate in a fall in Taiwan’s exports.
- Taiwan retail sales slipped back into contraction in September, as motor sales plunged yet again.
- Strong economic growth contrasts sharply with sluggish wages and weak household spending…
- …Nonetheless, exports should stand out in next week’s Q3 GDP data; we expect an acceleration.
- Taiwan's retail sales growth finally rebounded, to +0.4% in August, after months of constant falls.
- This was supported by a milder drop in auto sales, which could recover if a US trade deal is agreed.
- All told, still-weak consumption reflects flat wages,a soft property market and slumping tourism.
- Taiwan's central bank kept the discount rate at 2.000% yesterday, which was no surprise to anyone.
- Economic growth is likely to be much stronger in Q3; we have upgraded our forecast to 8.4%.
- Strong export growth is reducing the need for a rate cut, notwithstanding weak consumption.