Top 5 Graphs of the Week: Industrial Production, Commodity Prices, and Inflation
This week we look at Industrial Production figures from the US, EU, Japan and
China, and then we take a look at where commodities are tracking, before
reviewing the inflation results out over the week from the US and EU. Then we
finish up with a review of the monetary policy decisions from Japan,
Switzerland, and Mexico. The analysis echoes some of the comments made in the
economic calendar
for the week just past.
1. Industrial Production
Industrial production figures released over the week showed no real surprises
with the pattern broadly in line with the expected path from recovery. The US
showed a deceleration in Industrial production growth as the comparator figure
started to recover; still too soon to call a double dip but it will pay to watch
the rest of the data. Japan also saw a slight deceleration in its industrial
production recovery - as the trade dependent economy continues to rebound from
the deep drops during the height of the crisis. The EU showed continued signs of
recovery or renormalisation, and the China data - there for comparison showed
continued strength. So broadly Industrial Production has shown a period of deep
contraction followed by short term recovery, the question is - where to next?

2. Commodities Index
On a slightly related note, commodity prices have over the past year recovered
slightly from the crash in late 2008. however this recovery is showing signs of
running out of steam. This may be driven by lower demand from large industrial
producers such as China (which lines up with a slight tapering of its industrial
production growth rate), but also risk appetites will be playing into the
equation. On the inflation front it is a bit of a two-way street (as is apparent
in the next two charts), with falling year on year returns likely to play into
lower headline inflation, and relatively subdued core inflation having little
inflationary impulse on commodity prices.

3. US Inflation
US headline inflation came in at 2%, down from 2.2% in April. Core inflation
compared to May 2009 was up 0.9%, the same rate as April. The headline figure is
starting to turn due to relative topping out of commodity prices, and will
certainly give ammunition to those who see a high risk of deflation for the US.
It is likely that disinflation will continue, but unless there is continued
weakness and a sizable double dip, then it's probably a low probability outcome.
The results also vindicate the Federal Reserve's stance on interest rates, and
gives room for continued super stimulatory monetary policy for the time being.

4. Euro Zone Inflation
EU inflation on the other hand showed signs of further increases, with headline
inflation up 1.6% from 1.5%, and core inflation remaining stable at 0.8%.
However there is still unlikely to be persistent inflation in the EU as the
recovery remains uncertain and weak, indeed fiscal austerity measures may even
drive up inflation as price setters seek to compensate for an increases in taxes
that may occur as fiscal jitters remain the issue du jour. Not much else to say,
but to note that as usual inflation rates vary significantly between countries
in the EU - this goes to the repeated observation that the recovery in the EU is
going to be gradual, fragile, and uneven.

5. Monetary Policy Review
Three major central banks announced their monetary policy decisions this week,
with all of them announcing no change to the interest rate, as their respective
situations saw the balance of risks still lying on the growth side, vs those
like Australia/Canada/Brazil/India with the risks increasingly turning to the
inflation side rather than the growth sustainability side. Banco de Mexico left
its core rate at 4.5%, the Swiss National Bank held at 0.25%, and the Bank of
Japan held at 0.1%. The interesting point of all was the Bank of Japan
announcing a $33 billion dollar loan scheme, whereby it will make low cost
funding available to private banks in order to try and spur lending to
companies, in an attempt to stimulate the economy and beat down the persistent
deflation problem.

Summary
So we saw industrial production continuing its rebound in most economies, with a
few key ones, including China, Japan, and the US, showing tentative signs of a
deceleration in the rate of growth. However one or two data points a trend does
not make. On a related note commodities prices have shown a marked drop in the
annual rate of return as commodity prices stabilize following a slight rebound
since the 2008 crash.
On the inflation front, in most of the key developed
nations there are no clear signs of a pick up in inflation, if anything
there is a slight risk for deflation. Indeed as we saw in the monetary policy
decisions this week, the balance of risks for most economies are still weighted
towards sustaining the recovery, rather than risks of a resurgence in inflation.
And on both the industrial production, commodity prices, inflation, and monetary
policy fronts, things could change quickly as the year unfolds. But one thing's
for sure, the all clear signal will still be some time coming.
Sources:
1. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
2. Jefferies www.jefferies.com
3. Bureau of Labor Statistics www.bls.gov
4. EuroStat epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu
5. Swiss National Bank www.snb.ch & Bank of
Japan www.boj.or.jp & Banco de Mexico www.banxico.org.mx
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/top5graphs19jun.html
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