At
the same time, China's expected reopening after almost three
years of COVID-19 curbs is set to lead a recovery in its own
economy and other emerging Asian markets, the investment bank's
analysts said in a series of reports published on Sunday.
"Risks are to the downside," the reports said, projecting the
global economy to grow by 2.2% next year, lower than the
International Monetary Fund's latest 2.7% growth estimate.
Next year, Morgan Stanley predicts a sharp split between
developed economies "in or near recession" while emerging
economies "recover modestly" but said an overall global pickup
would likely remain elusive. China's economy was predicted to
grow 5% in 2023, outpacing the average 3.7% growth expected for
emerging markets, while the average growth in the Group of 10
developed countries was forecast at just 0.3%.
Central banks across the globe have raised interest rates this
year to curb raging inflation, and in the United States, Morgan
Stanley predicted the Federal Reserve to keep rates high in 2023
as inflation remains strong after peaking in the fourth quarter
of this year.
"The U.S. economy just skirts recession in 2023, but the landing
doesn't feel so soft as job growth slows meaningfully and the
unemployment rate continues to rise," the report said,
predicting a 0.5% expansion next year.
"The cumulative effect of tight policy in 2023 spills over into
2024, resulting in two very weak years," the report added.
Globally too, the peak in inflation should come in the current
quarter, the analysts said, "with disinflation driving the
narrative next year".
* U.S. core inflation to fall to 2.9% at end-2023,
headlineinflation to 1.9% * Asia growth to dip to 3.4% in 1H23
before recovering to4.6% in 2H23, fuelled by domestic demand *
Cross-asset returns – especially in fixed income – willlook much
better in 2023 than in 2022, driven by cheaperstarting
valuations * High-grade fixed income to outperform global
equities * EM and Japan stocks to outperform, with U.S.
shareslagging
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland, editing by Miral Fahmy)
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