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.
Please use the filters on the right to search for a specific date or topic.
Daily Monitor 
- We expect the initial estimate of May payrolls to show a 26K month-to-month decline.
 
- LFS unemployment will likely tick up to 4.6% in April, and LFS employment should gain 48K.
 
- We expect year-over-year whole-economy AWE ex-bonus growth to fall to 5.3% in April, from 5.6%.
 
 
- We look for a 125K rise in May payrolls; the surge in distribution sector jobs likely has petered out...
 
- ...While the most reliable survey indicators show that rising uncertainty has weighed on hiring.
 
- Continuing claims data point to another rise in unemployment, increasing pressure on the FOMC to ease.
 
 
- Mining and services offset weak industrial output in Chile, providing a solid base for Q2 growth.
 
- Business sentiment improved slightly but remains fragile, with construction still the weakest link.
 
- Peru’s inflation is well under control, led by cheaper food and fuel prices; the BCRP is likely to cut soon.
 
 
- The dramatic collapse in Indonesia’s trade surplus in April was down in large part to seasonal noise…
 
- …Underlying the emerging down-shift are struggling exports and a welcome recovery in imports.
 
- We have cut our 2025 CPI forecast to 1.5%, in view of the soft May data and the coming utilities relief.
 
 
- Both candidates in the presidential election have committed to a KRW30T fiscal plan to boost the economy.
 
- May’s export growth was not as weak as it appeared; WDA monthly and annual growth were positive.
 
- Still, tariff and trade-policy uncertainty will continue to weigh on Korea’s GDP growth in 2025.
 
 
- Consumers are back to spending rather than saving, which should keep GDP growth ticking along.
 
- Households seem to be reducing saving, and borrowing on credit cards to support spending.
 
- Manufacturing is past the worst, and so far we see little sign of trade diversion cutting goods inflation.