US Publications
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Datanotes Weekly Monitor Global
Manufacturing capex and hiring likely to remain very weak
- We expect a first estimate of a mere 50K rise in November payrolls, despite slightly better surveys...
- ...Retailers have hired relatively few seasonal workers; the upward bias in the first estimate should be mild.
- The unemployment rate likely ticked up to 4.5% in November, from 4.4% in October.
Much weaker wage growth likely lies ahead.
Soft September sets for stage for more consumer weakness in Q4.
- Spending rose by 2.7% in Q3, but the stagnation in September likely foreshadows a very weak Q4.
- Real incomes are barely rising, and many near-real time indicators point to a sharp slowdown in growth.
- Q1 likely will be weak too, but bumper tax refunds and a pick-up in hiring will support a Q2 revival.
Core goods inflation likely to retreat in H1 2026.
- The average effective tariff rate is currently just 12%, far short of the near-20% widely expected in spring.
- China imports have dived; more imports than expected from Canada and Mexico are USMCA-compliant.
- The plunge in the Cass Freight Index looks alarming, but it probably is overstating weakness in industry.
Improving slightly, but investment still soft outside of tech.
Weak jobs market continues to depress consumers.
Weak September sales are a sign of what's to come.
Core PCE inflation set to undershoot the FOMC’s forecast in Q4.
- Growth in average hourly earnings is resilient because fewer entry level workers are being hired...
- ...Rising unemployment, the low quits rate and a wide range of surveys all point to an underlying slowdown.
- The NY Fed’s Williams still sees room to ease policy “...in the near term”, bolstering our December call.
Boost from lower rates likely has only a bit further to run.
Payrolls flattered by the seasonals; rising unemployment keeps a December easing in play.
December hangs in the balance, but substantial easing probably still lies ahead.
Dip in mortgage rates providing only a small tailwind.
- Retailers usually pass on the bulk of any cost increases to consumers, but bank most of any savings.
- Retailers won’t cut prices only to hike them again if the White House reimposes tariffs via other routes.
- The AI stock sell-off is small so far, but a deeper rout would have a tangible impact on GDP growth.
Pointing to a sharp slowdown in wage growth.
Reliability questionable, but grim reading nonetheless.