Global economy dodges recession by narrowest of margins:
Kemp
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[November 19, 2019] By
John Kemp
LONDON (Reuters) - The global economy may
have narrowly avoided a recession, with most industrial and financial
indicators pointing to a slight improvement in September-October after a
sharp slowdown in the middle of the year.
World trade volumes were down almost 1.5% in the three months from June
to August compared with the same period a year earlier, the worst
performance since the recession of 2008/09.
The trade data are the most recent available from the Netherland Bureau
for Economic Policy Analysis ("World trade monitor", CPB, Oct. 25).
Since then, however, most equity and bond market indicators as well as
industrial production surveys have shown the slowdown has eased
(https://tmsnrt.rs/2O1uDoV).
South Korea’s KOSPI-100 equity index, normally a good proxy for trade
given the country’s heavy exposure to exports, is up 11% since the end
of August and has risen year-on-year for the first time since May 2018.
Caterpillar Inc.’s share price, another bellwether for the global
economy because of its central role in the heavy industrial supply
chain, is up almost 21% since the end of August and is showing the
strongest upward momentum since 2018.
In the bond market, the U.S. Treasury yield curve has un-inverted, with
yields on 10-year notes now 23 basis points above three-month bills,
from a discount of 52 basis points near the end of August.
The curve normally inverts before a sharp slowdown and then often starts
to normalize shortly before the onset of a recession as the Federal
Reserve cuts short-term rates.
In this case, however, investors are increasingly confident the Fed’s
three interest rate cuts since July will be enough to forestall a
descent into recession.
Bond traders seem convinced the earlier loss of momentum will prove to
be a mid-cycle slowdown, like 1967, 1995, 1998 or 2015, rather than mark
the end of the expansion, like 2001 or 2008.
MANUFACTURING
Recent industrial production data from the United States, Germany and
Japan all provide some evidence the economy is turning a corner.
U.S. manufacturing output excluding motor vehicles and parts (hit by the
strike at General Motors) was down 0.5% in the three months from August
to October compared with a year earlier.
But the rolling three-month average improved in September and October
for the first time since the start of the year, suggesting that
recessionary forces were easing.
Japan’s manufacturing production was down 0.8% in the three months from
July to September compared with a year earlier, but the rate of decline
was easing.
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A steel worker of
Germany's industrial conglomerate ThyssenKrupp AG stands a mid of
emitting sparks of raw iron from a blast furnace at Germany's
largest steel factory in Duisburg, Germany. Picture taken January,
28, 2019. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo
Germany’s industrial output was also down by more than 4% in July-September
compared with a year ago, but again the rate of decline showed signs of easing.
Interest rate cuts, dialled-down trade tensions between the United States and
China, and the resilience of the service sector in many countries all seem to
have helped keep the global economy from descending into a recession.
There have been negative first-round effects on growth from reduced business
investment but, so far, few signs of second-round effects on employment,
consumer confidence and household spending.
On most measures, the global economy has escaped recession by a narrow margin,
but the nascent re-acceleration is fragile and depends on an improvement in
business confidence and investment to become self-sustaining.
The improving outlook for the economy and therefore oil consumption in 2019/2020
has been reflected in higher oil prices and firmer calendar spreads.
Front-month Brent futures prices have moved above year-ago levels for the first
time since October 2018, suggesting traders expect the worst of the 2018/19
slump is over.
Brent’s six-month calendar spread, which is probably a better measure for short
and medium-term expectations about the production-consumption balance, is
progressively tightening.
If the global economy avoids a recession, as now seems likely, the slowdown in
U.S. shale production growth and continued output restraint from Saudi Arabia,
should reduce the prospective surplus in the oil market next year.
Related columns:
- Oil price risks shift to the upside, funds continue buying (Reuters, Nov. 12)
- Global economy slows, recession risks hang in the balance (Reuters, Oct. 12)
- U.S. manufacturing slowdown spreads to services (Reuters, Oct. 4)
- Global economy is probably in recession (Reuters, Aug. 7)
(Editing by Larry King)
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