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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- The 0.3% increase in Italian GDP in Q1 was driven by both domestic demand and net trade.
- In Switzerland, it was just domestic demand that pushed GDP up by a whopping 0.8% on the quarter.
- Growth is now slowing in both economies, though risks to our H2 calls are likely to the upside.
- 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.
TRADE TRUCE BRINGS LATAM MODEST GAINS…
- …BUT DOMESTIC FRAGILITIES UNDERMINE GROWTH PROSPECTS
In one line: Switzerland was on a tear before the tariff shock; surveys point to slower growth in Q2.
Korean PMI shows domestic demand tanking, but sentiment is improving thanks to tariff war pause
- In one line: Near-zero inflation is once again around the corner.
- In one line: A partially welcome collapse in the surplus.
A partially welcome collapse in Indonesia’s trade surplus
Near-zero inflation is once again around the corner
Cracks starting to show in the labor market.
Net trade and inventories on course for a big combined boost to headline GDP in Q2.
Consumption still resilient, but a slowdown looms.
- In one line: Boosted by agriculture and capex, but momentum set to fade.
- In one line: Retail softens in April, but growth momentum is holding up.
- In one line: Boosted by investment, which can’t be relied upon post-“Liberation Day”.
In one line: Upturn in money supply continues; Italian GDP on a solid footing in Q1.
In one line: Strong, but remember difference in base effects in the CPI and HICP.
- In one line: Disregard completely; household spending is still weakening.
In one line: Consumption growth will slow in Q2.
The April collapse in Philippine imports in context
- Consumers’ spending is on track for respectable growth in Q2, but a sharper slowdown looms...
- ...As tariff-induced prices increases push up core PCE inflation, weighing on real incomes.
- Tariff-related distortions to the trade and inventories likely will artificially boost Q2 GDP growth.