Economic surveys - for households and companies - started the year on a slightly more positive note. Consumer confidence (+0.3 points) benefited from a slight fall in indicators for unemployment and inflation prospects. The composite PMI index returned to expansion territory (+0.6 points to 50.2), with the contraction in the manufacturing industry easing slightly (+1.5 points to 46.6), while the services index fell dipped (-0.2 points to 51.4).
The German business climate is being driven down by the prolonged recession in industry. Industrial production (in the broad sense, including construction) has contracted in 10 of the last 12 quarters (including a further negative quarter likely in Q4 2024), for a cumulative drop of 8.4% (-14.7% compared to the peak seen at the end of 2017). This momentum explains the low IFO index.
The French economy remains weak, although it is showing signs of stabilisation. The Insee business climate indicator remained stable at 95 in January, while the composite PMI rebounded slightly (47.6 in January compared to 47.5 in December).
As expected, Italian growth failed to outperform that of the Eurozone in 2024 (average annual growth of 0.5% versus 0.7% respectively). In addition, it remained at a standstill in Q4 (0.0% q/q) for the second consecutive quarter.
After growing four times faster than the Eurozone in 2024 (3.2% as an annual average versus 0.8% respectively), the Spanish economy is set to maintain its dynamism throughout 2025. On the back of growth of 0.8% q/q in the last three quarters of the year, real GDP is set to continue its momentum, with expected growth of 0.7% q/q in Q1 2025, marking the seventh consecutive quarter of growth above or equal to 0.7%.
The US economy ended 2024 with its real GDP growing +0.6% q/q in Q4, a solid figure, though slightly down on the previous quarter (-0.2 pp). Household consumption (+1.0% q/q, +0.1 pp) was once again the main growth driver. The government also contributed positively, in contrast to private fixed investment (-0.1% q/q), despite the growth in residential investment and intellectual property products.
Les dynamiques de consommation et de production industrielle restent défavorables. Les ventes au détail (hors carburant) ont reculé de 0,5 % m/m en décembre et de 1,1 % au T4 par rapport au T3. La production industrielle qui a enregistré, entre septembre et novembre, trois mois de baisse successifs demeure sur une dynamique très difficile au démarrage de l’année 2025. Certes, le PMI manufacturier s’améliore (+1,3 point à 48,3) tout comme l’enquête mensuelle du CBI, mais l’enquête trimestrielle du patronat britannique chute à nouveau lourdement au T1
According to the Jibun Bank PMI survey, the Japanese economy has started 2025 in different directions. The manufacturing PMI fell to 48.7 in January (-0.9 pp, the lowest since March 2024), against a backdrop of a wider deterioration in production and new orders. By contrast, the services PMI accelerated according to the flash estimate, with Business Activity rising from 50.9 to 52.7.
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At the end of 2024, the household saving rate in the Eurozone was higher than it was before the COVID crisis. Among the four main economies of the Eurozone, France is no exception. Only in Spain and Italy has this trend been accompanied by an increase in investment in housing. In France and Germany, these additional savings are exclusively financial in nature. The factors at the root of the high financial saving rate will not prevent it from falling in 2025, but will contain it.
The first FOMC meeting of 2025 (28-29 January) should result in the target rate being held at +4.25% - +4.5%. In our view, this would mark the beginning of a pause lasting until mid-2026, due to the anticipated pick-up in inflation that would result from Donald Trump's economic policy.
On 20 January 2025, Donald Trump once again became President of the United States. With a ‘clear mandate’, the Republican intends to harness his victory by addressing his favourite issues. His return to the Oval Office comes at a time when the dollar is witnessing one of the biggest rallies in history. The real effective exchange rate of the greenback is now at a comparable level to the one which led to the Plaza Accord of 1985, and its appreciation has a high likelihood of continuing. This trend is likely to frustrate the new President, who is keen to denounce weak currencies as penalising US industry
The labour market in the UK continues to deteriorate. According to tax data (PAYE) published on 21 January by the ONS, the number of employees in the UK fell by 46,922 (-0.2% m/m) in December, the largest one-month decline since November 2021, which followed a drop of -0.1% in November. The year-on-year change drops drastically and falls below zero (-8,407) for the first time since April 2021.
“Not all died, but all were stricken”. While the Covid-19 pandemic spared no one, its consequences, particularly on the budgetary front, were not the same for everyone.
The global economy faces a long list of uncertainties -growth, inflation, interest rates, political, geopolitical, tariffs, etc. When uncertainty is exceptionally high, as is the case today, the economic environment becomes intrinsically unstable and may evolve suddenly and drastically. This acts as an economic headwind because companies that are highly exposed to these sources of uncertainty may postpone investment and hiring decisions. This may weigh on household confidence, triggering a reduction in discretionary spending. Financial markets may also become more volatile because investors shorten their investment horizon. There is a clear urgency of creating a predictable policy environment.
While in most major advanced economies the year-on-year growth in nominal wages has been back above inflation for a few months now, we can ask ourselves where households’ purchasing power stands compared to its pre-inflationary crisis level. This purchasing power can be measured in two ways: in the broad sense and more accurately, when it is calculated on the basis of the real gross disposable income (GDI) of households; and in a narrower sense, but perhaps more meaningful for households, when it is assessed on the basis of real wages.