It was a rare coincidence that last week, four major central banks – the Federal Reserve, the ECB, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan – held their monetary policy meeting. Considering that they all target 2% inflation, their decisions shed light on the role of differences in terms of approach as well as in the economic environment and outlook. However, they share a preparedness to react when circumstances require. Given the mounting concern about the Omicron variant, more than ever, monetary policy is data-dependent.
Economic figures for November once again show the dynamic momentum of Chinese exports (+21.4% year-on-year in current dollars), which continues to drive production and investment in the manufacturing sector. Our barometer highlights a deteriorated industrial performance in September-November 2021 compared to the previous 3-month period. Yet the industrial situation has been picking up slowly since October, after major disruptions in September due to power outages and supply chain disruptions. Industrial production rose 3.8% y/y, compared to 3.5% in October.
The Japanese economy revived in the fourth quarter after the state of emergency related to the Covid-19 infections was lifted in all prefectures in October. In particular, sentiment in the services sector has clearly improved. The quarterly Tankan survey showed that actual business conditions in the non-manufacturing sector gained 7 points in December compared with three months earlier. Moreover, consumer confidence improved in October and November to levels seen before the outbreak of the pandemic, although remaining low relative to its long-term average. By contrast, the gains in the manufacturing sector were minimal, as activity continues to be affected by supply disruptions and rising production costs that are reducing profit margins
Instead of drastically restricting conditions of activity, the government only made a few adjustments to their policy for combatting the pandemic: the state of emergency was extended for three months to 31 March 2022. Despite the resurging pandemic, business prospects are still looking upbeat this winter. PMI indices are holding at high levels, especially for the manufacturing sector. In November, the manufacturing PMI rose 1.7 points to a new high of 62.8, supported by the improvement of the employment and new orders components. The services PMI also improved, up 3.5 points to 55.9. The composite PMI for the past three months has held steady compared to three previous three months, as shown in the Pulse below.
Despite a substantial increase in new Covid-19 infections since the start of November, the infection rate is currently below those in France or Germany. Meanwhile, concerns about the health situation have had little effect on business confidence so far: the PMI Composite index improved in November (up 1.9 points to 58.3) thanks to better prospects in services. The positive trend in this sector can also be seen in the European Commission survey, which reveals levels of optimism not seen for twenty years. This said, household confidence has fallen back, mainly due to fears of rising consumer prices.
In the week of 8 to 14 December, 4.31 million new Covid-19 cases were reported worldwide, a 5.1% increase compared to the previous week. The biggest weekly increase was in Africa (+111%). New cases also soared in North America, up 23%, due to the increase in contaminations following the Thanksgiving holidays (chart 4, black line). Over the same period, a decline in new cases was observed in South America (-7.4%), Asia (-5%) and Europe (-0.2%), but in Europe this comes after an exponential increase in previous weeks (chart 1). As to the spread of Covid-19 variants, several countries reported confirmed cases of Omicron recently, bringing the total to 67 countries.