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.
- China’s April retail sales, investment and industrial production point to flagging growth.
- Policymakers saw this coming, hence the PBoC’s May 7 announcement of interest rate and RRR cuts.
- The slowdown stems more from existing issues, with the direct impact of the tariff war still emerging.
Duncan WrigleyChina+
- EZ headline inflation is about to fall to 2%, helping to get further ECB easing over the line, but how much?
- Survey data continue to signal significant upside risk to food inflation; energy inflation will rebound too.
- Services inflation will drop sharply in May but is set to be sticky around 3%.
Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone
- New rules will cut immigration by 98K a year—0.2% of the population—according to government estimates.
- We estimate that the curbs will slow potential growth by 0.1% per year, raising the pressure for tax hikes.
- A greater sectoral mismatch between workers and jobs will likely result too, adding to wage pressures.
Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK
China to stick to targeted easing, despite broad cooling in April activity growth
Duncan WrigleyChina+
Pre-“Liberation Day” anxieties were there for all to see in Thailand’s Q1
Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia
Extremely low response rate and partisan divide raise questions over reliability.
Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US
Pointing to a sharp fall in new home sales & residential construction.
Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US
Recent resilience unlikely to last beyond the summer.
Samuel TombsUS
Pointing to a mere 0.12% rise in the core PCE deflator, and margin pressure for distributors.
Samuel TombsUS
Further weakness probably lies in store.
Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US
In one line: A new record high, thanks to tariff front-running by US firms.
Melanie Debono (Senior Eurozone Economist)Eurozone
Don’t panic about the continued ballooning of India’s trade deficit
Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia
- In one line: Solid start to the year, but risks loom.
Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Latin America
- In one line: Banxico cuts again but strikes a cautious tone.
Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Global
- April import price data damage the theory that overseas manufacturers will absorb some tariff costs.
- PPI trade services prices—gross margins—usually are revised up; retailers are planning June price hikes.
- Residential construction payrolls are vulnerable to a drop in housing starts; the market is oversupplied.
Samuel TombsUS
- Banxico cut rates again, but its tone was more cautious due to the recent uptick in Mexico’s inflation.
- Economic activity is weak, and inflation is within the target range, supporting the case for further easing.
- Argentina’s inflation slowed sharply in April, defying expectations after the FX liberalisation.
Andrés Abadía (Chief LatAm Economist)Latin America
- VND underperformance could look bad amid ongoing US trade talks, but the SBV’s hands are tied.
- Talk of a ‘crisis’ in Thai tourism is overblown; yes, Q1 was grim, but other big markets are struggling too.
- Singapore export growth easily beat expectations in April, though underlying trends are softening.
Miguel Chanco (Chief EM Asia Economist)Emerging Asia
- Japan’s GDP shrank more than the market expected in Q1, and for the first time in a year.
- Weak services exports were to blame; consumption was hit by fragile confidence and high inflation.
- The BoJ will hold rate s for the time being, as it mulls the outcome of talks and assesses its effects.
Kelvin Lam (Senior China+ Economist)China+
- We look for broad-based strength in the surveys for May, but we think it will be temporary.
- The Eurozone’s trade surplus soared in Q1, boosted by tariff front-running in pharmaceuticals.
- The EZ runs a deficit with the US in services, but a surplus if intellectual property is excluded.
Claus Vistesen (Chief Eurozone Economist)Eurozone
- Strong underlying growth momentum and President Trump’s backtracking on tariffs boost our forecasts.
- We boost our growth forecasts to 1.1% and 1.2% in 2025 and 2026 respectively, each up 0.2pp..
- We see risks to the consensus, and the MPC’s forecast, for April CPI skewed heavily upwards.
Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK