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Top 5 Economics Graphs of the Week - 28 May 2011
This week we look at some of the latest economic data coming out of Japan;
noting a rare occurrence of positive inflation, and observing a further trade
deficit in April. Then we look at some US data, first checking in on the US
consumer sentiment index, and then a proxy for investor sentiment - long term
mutual fund flows. Finally the latest monetary policy interest rate decisions
are covered-off.
1. Japan Inflation
As noted Japan
recorded a rare positive inflation figure in April as consumer prices rose 0.3%
on an annual basis, having sat at 0% for most of this year, while April 2010 saw
deflation of -1.2%. A certain degree of the positive inflation figure can be
attributed to temporary shortages brought about by the earthquake, but inflation
had been in a mild upward trajectory anyway. Like the rest of the world, Japan
had seen some impact from rising commodity prices (as can be seen in the upward
trend in imports on the next chart). Meanwhile aggregate demand has probably
only had a marginal impact on inflation as the Japanese economy has been in its
second recession after a brief period of growth.
2. Japan International Trade
Japan reported exports of JPY 5.2 trillion in the month of April, down -13% year
on year and -12% month on month. Imports were JPY 5.6 trillion, up 9% from April
last year and down -1% compared to March. The April figures add another month of
trade deficit as rising import costs meet relatively stable exports. The April
figures did see some impact from the earthquake as supply chain disruptions
weighed on exports. Overall Japan is yet to see either its exports or imports
reach pre-crisis levels, which shows the weakness of the Japanese economy, but
also the slow rate of growth and economic recovery in its trading partners (not
to mention a rising share of global exports for China and other emerging
markets).
3. US Consumer Sentiment
The Reuters/University of Michigan US consumer
sentiment survey showed some improvement in the final reading for May, with the
index at 74.3 vs consensus 72.4, and the April reading of 69.8. Future
expectations performed well, at 69.5 vs 61.6 in April, meanwhile current
conditions was basically flat at 81.9 vs 82.5 in the previous month. So while
the current conditions result was not inspiring, the trajectory of the future
expectations part was promising, indeed if the trajectory continues it will be
positive for the medium term outlook, which is consistent with other indicators
and conditions.
4. US Mutual Fund Flows
US mutual fund flows remained in
positive territory in total during April, with the majority of net inflows going
to bond mutual funds, showing a possible pick up in momentum after flows into
bond funds dried up at the start of the year. Domestic equity flows continued to
languish, while foreign equity fund flows remained positive as investors looked
elsewhere for better macro-economic fundamentals. It will pay to watch this
chart through the year, especially as key events unfold such as the ending of
quantitative easing, and a potential short-term correction in US equities. A
final thought on the chart below is the large amount of funds that have flown
into bond mutual funds, this aspect will be interesting for equities when/if
bond returns begin to suffer as the monetary policy stance turns later this
year.
5. Monetary Policy Review
The past week in monetary
policy saw six emerging market central banks announce interest rate
decisions. Those that altered interest rate levels included: Israel +25bps to
3.25%, and Nigeria +50bps to 8.00%, while those that held interest rates
unchanged were: Pakistan 14.00%, Turkey 6.25%, Georgia 8.00%, and Mexico 4.50%.
So it was very much a continuation of the theme were emerging markets begin to
take more caution in balancing the growth vs inflation risks, but also as the
inflation impulse begins to taper off as policy measures and stable commodity
prices begin to take effect. But the rate hikes in Israel and Nigeria show that
inflation pressures are not completely gone in emerging markets, indeed Vietnam
is still a hotspot of inflation.
Summary
So we saw the emergence of inflation in Japan, after a long period of deflation,
however short term factors were likely the main cause of this. Meanwhile Japan's
international trade results showed stagnant growth and short term impact from
the earthquake. In the US consumer sentiment improved again, heading in a
promising trajectory. Also in the US long term mutual fund flows pointed to some
interesting trends, and some key areas to watch in the stock and bond markets
through the rest of the year. Finally, the week in monetary policy saw two
emerging market economies tighten, while other emerging markets opted for
caution in the growth risk vs inflation risk balancing act.
Sources
1. OECD Statistics stats.oecd.org
2. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
3. Reuters customers.reuters.com
4. Investment Company Institute www.ici.org
5. Central Bank News www.centralbanknews.info
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