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.

Please use the filters on the right to search for a specific date or topic.

Daily Monitor

24 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor ECB to cut rates in June, but the July reduction perished yesterday

  • The June rate cut is safe, but sticky Q1 negotiated wage growth will prevent another one in July. 
  • We now see the ECB easing by 25bp in June, September, October and December; no cuts in 2025.
  • The May EZ PMIs add to our conviction that EZ GDP growth is continuing its tepid rebound in Q2.

Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

24 May 2024 UK Monitor PMI shows that the inflation downtrend remains on track

  • The flash PMI suggests services CPI inflation will resume its decline after barely falling in April.
  • The PMI suggests growth is slowing to a more comfortable 0.3% quarter-to-quarter pace too.
  • So, the MPC can cut interest rates in August, even if April inflation ended the chances of a June reduction.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

23 May 2024 US Monitor Markets likely to focus on the PMI employment index, despite its record

  • S&P's employment index has a poor long-term correlation with payrolls, but markets are paying attention now.
  • Leading indicators leave us looking for an above-consensus 230K initial claims print today.
  • "Various" FOMC members signalled willingness to hike in the minutes, but the data has moved on since then.

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

23 May 2024 Emerging Asia Monitor Malaysian export growth in H2 will come down to electronics

  • Malaysian export growth rose sharply in April, but this was mostly down to favourable base effects…
  • …With this support likely to wane in coming months, all eyes are on the recovery in electronics exports.
  • BI stood pat yesterday, after April’s shock hike; the economy has yet to feel the full force of this cycle.

Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

23 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor Will ECB doves have their wings clipped by today's Q1 wage data?

  • Is the idea of a July rate cut sinking without a trace? Isabel Schnabel seems to think so.
  • Today’s Q1 negotiated wage growth data are a wild card; one-offs in Germany are the main upside risk.
  • We agree with Ms. Schnabel’s assessment that the natural rate has increased, at least temporarily.

Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

23 May 2024 UK Monitor Services inflation surprise means MPC will wait until August to cut

  • We expect the MPC to cut Bank Rate in August, versus June previously, following strong April inflation.
  • Services inflation barely slowed in April and was 0.4pp stronger than the MPC expected.
  • The services strength was widespread and not concentrated in a handful of erratic items.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

22 May 2024 US Monitor Existing home sales probably flat in April, but falls likely further ahead

  • We see existing home sales unchanged last month, but the outlook for the rest of Q2 is dim. 
  • The May rise in Manheim used car prices looks like a blip; sluggish sales will lead to a further margin squeeze.
  • Fed minutes unlikely to change market perceptions about easing timing.

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

22 May 2024 LatAm Monitor Colombia's Q1 economic rebound masks underlying weaknesses

  • Mixed signals in Colombia’s Q1 GDP, as strong consumption clashes with weak investment.
  • Policy uncertainty under President Petro is stifling the investment recovery; the outlook remains bleak.
  • The more than 30% collapse in capex since Petro took office highlights the hit, amid high interest rates.

Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Latin America

22 May 2024 China+ Monitor Korea's export recovery continues, when adjusted for working days

  • Korean 20-day exports slowed sharply in May because of working-day effects.
  • The underlying trend is actually improving after adjustment. Chip shipments remain the major driver.
  • We expect no change at the upcoming BoK meeting but have pushed back our first rate cut to Q4.

Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+

22 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor Net trade will be a drag on EZ GDP growth in coming quarters

  • The EZ goods trade surplus widened in March, and net trade in goods likely boosted GDP in Q1.
  • Advance data from China as well as surveys suggest this boost is disappearing in Q2...
  • ...And we think rising imports means net trade is set to weigh on growth for the rest of the year.

Melanie Debono (Senior Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

22 May 2024 UK Monitor Modestly stronger potential growth after the general election

  • Polls suggest the Labour Party will win the general election that must be held by January 2025.
  • The party plans supply-side boosting initiatives, from freeing planning rules to ‘crowding in’ investment.
  • Those policies pose modest upside risk to current UK potential growth of around 1.5% per year.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

21 May 2024 US Monitor Homebase data imply growth in payrolls slowed further in May

  • Our Homebase model points to an initial estimate of a subpar 150K rise in private payrolls in May.  
  • The Redbook measure of year-over-year growth in retail sales has been remarkably strong lately...
  • ...But it has often overstated the trend in the official retail sales data in the recent past; we think it is again. 

Ian Shepherdson (Chief Economist, Chairman and Founder)US

21 May 2024 LatAm Monitor Strong start to the year for Chile, but downside risks remain

  • Chile’s economy gained traction in Q1, thanks mainly to improving domestic demand.
  • Falling inflation and lower interest rates are gradually supporting the upturn, but downside risks remain.
  • The recovery will likely lose speed but won’t collapse; further monetary policy normalisation will help.

Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Latin America

21 May 2024 Emerging Asia Monitor Why you shouldn't hang your hat on Thailand's Q1 GDP surprise

  • GDP growth in Thailand smashed expectations in Q1, as it fell trivially to 1.5% from 1.7% in Q4…
  • …But the consumption-and inventories-led quarterly bounce is dubious and unsustainable.
  • Merchandise trade and investment went from bad to worse, though the latter should revive from Q2.

Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia

21 May 2024 China+ Monitor China's new property measures a good first step, but not enough

  • Policymakers on Friday announced a raft of property support measures aimed at tackling oversupply...
  • ...But the funding allocated to buy up unsold housing inventory is just the start, and more will be needed.
  • In April, second-hand housing prices plunged at their steepest rate since September 2014.

Duncan WrigleyChina+

21 May 2024 Eurozone Monitor Where will investment fare worst in the EZ big four this year?

  • Were it not for the superbonus, Italian investment likely would be falling off a cliff...
  • ...Interest rates faced by firms are among the high- est, credit standards tight and loan demand sinking.
  • The lagged hit from rising interest rates on Eurozone investment will fade later this year, but only slowly.

Melanie Debono (Senior Eurozone Economist)Eurozone

21 May 2024 UK Monitor Gilt yields will fall, but not as much as you might expect

  • We expect two-year gilt yields to fall to 3.9% by end- 2024 as the MPC cuts rates.
  • But high government refinancing and BoE gilt sales limit the fall in 10-year gilt yields to 4.0% at end-2024.
  • Upside risks remain from inflation persistence and implausibly low public-spending forecasts.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

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

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