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Financial markets
Markets and the economy
Losing momentum
Sep 24th 2014, 9:59 by Buttonwood
IT HAS been a consistent theme of this blog in recent months that global growth
has been slowing, a fact some investors may have missed in the good news about
American GDP. The latest confirmation came from the World Trade Organisation,
which cut its forecast for trade growth this year from 4.6% to 3.1% and for
2015 from 5.3% to 4%. The WTO doesn't forecast economic growth directly; it
takes its lead from other international organisations (Rabo Bank reckons the
IMF is set to reduce its growth forecast in the next few weeks).
What is interesting from the WTO announcement is that even the revised forecast
relies on a bit of optimism. Actual trade growth in the first half of the year
was just 1.8%; the organisation is relying on a rebound in the second half. The
first half regional numbers were revealing; Asia increased its exports by 4.2%
but its imports by just 2.1%. In effect, it has been gaining market share.
North America was more balanced, increasing exports by 3.3% and imports by 3%.
Europe was predictably sluggish, increasing exports by 1.2% and imports by
1.9%. The real weakness came in South America which suffered a 0.8% fall in
exports and a 3.4% decline in imports.
All told, developed economies provided the biggest share of demand; their
imports rose 2.6% while those of developing economies increased by just 0.5%.
In export terms, the developed economies continued to lose market share; their
exports grew 1.6%, while those of developing economies grew 2.1%.
Sluggish growth in 2014 would confirm the recent trend. After a phenomenal
rebound in 2010, trade growth slowed to 2.3% in 2012 and 2.2% in 2013. So what
is going on? Part of the problem is the slowdown in emerging market growth
detailed in a recent issue. In turn, this may be related to slowing Chinese
demand for commodities (incidentally, Goldman cut its Chinese GDP forecast for
2015 from 7.6% to 7.1%); commodity prices have been very weak recently, with
the widely-followed Bloomberg index dropping 12% since the end of June. Then
there may be specific problems this year; the winter weather that seems to have
hit US first quarter growth; the Japanese sales tax rise; the sanctions
tit-for-tat between the west and Russia.
But it is still striking that most people think the bond markets are mispriced
when a fall in commodity prices, weak inflation numbers in the developed world
and those growth revisions would seem to form a pretty good backdrop for fixed
income. (Worth noting the fifth consecutive fall in Germany's Ifo index as
well.) The continued resilience of equity markets (despite yesterday's wobble)
looks more of the odd one out.
UPDATE: And this just in from Citigroup
Our global growth forecasts continue to drift down, and we are cutting 0.1
percent off our 2015 forecast this month, and now look for global GDP growth of
2.8% this year and 3.3% for 2015 (at current exchange rates). This is the
second consecutive monthly downgrade to our 2015 growth forecast, while in
total we have cut our 2014 forecast by 0.5 percent (from 3.3% to 2.8%) since
January. We make notable downgrades this month to 2014-15 growth forecasts for
Argentina, Brazil, China, Denmark, Japan, Romania, Russia, South Africa and
Switzerland, partly balanced by a slight upgrade to our 2014 US growth
forecast.