Based on business surveys, the cyclical environment, globally, seems to have stabilised. A similar picture emerges for the eurozone and China, whereas in the US it is mixed. Stability’ characterises the monetary policy outlook. After the announcements in September, the ECB can afford to wait before making a judgment of the effectiveness of its policy stance. For the Federal Reserve, it seems that the bar for envisaging a change in the federal funds rate is high, even more so when it’s about considering a rate hike. Stabilisation of economic data and a stable, very accommodative monetary stance provide reasons for being hopeful, but this supposes that uncertainty doesn’t increase again. In this respect, unfortunately, the situation remains very opaque
Most indicators for November surprised on the upside. Despite a string of disappointing data, in particular from the manufacturing sector, GDP actually increased in Q3 by a meagre 0.1%, whereas the consensus had expected a further shrinkage (-0.1%). The main reason was robust growth of private consumption, underpinned strong household confidence levels. GfK indicate that household confidence has remained also very strong in Q4. Also net exports contributed positively to growth, as world trade bounced back. Nevertheless, industrial production remained very weak and the strong rebound in orders in September was the only positive surprise for manufacturers.