Eco Week
Economic Scenario

Economic scenario of 11 September 2023

09/11/2023
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GDP growth and inflation

UNITED STATES

After a strong second half of 2022 (+0.7% q/q on average per quarter), US activity decelerated only slightly in the first half of 2023 (+0.5% q/q on average per quarter), thanks to the resilience of household consumption and the strength of nonresidential investment. The impact of the tighter monetary policy on lending standards is strong but it still limited on activity and employment growth. Q3 GDP growth is expected to be very positive again before a sharp slowdown in Q4 and to slide into recession in the first half of 2024. While the peak in inflation was reached in mid-2022, core disinflation remains gradual. Headline inflation should approach the 2% target in 2024. However, the slow pace of disinflation argues in favor of keeping monetary policy in restrictive territory, despite the expected start of the easing cycle in Q2 2024. This should limit the recovery in 2024.

CHINA

Economic growth, which was sluggish and unbalanced in 2022, started to accelerate in early 2023 following the end of the zero Covid policy. However, the post-Covid recovery has lost momentum very rapidly. Export momentum has stalled due to weak global demand and tensions with the US. Domestic demand remains held back by a significant loss in consumer and investor confidence. The crisis in the property sector is persisting, with the continued fall in sales, new defaults of developers and growing difficulties of certain financial institutions. The government and the central bank implement new policy stimulus measures, which yet remain of moderate magnitude. The weak financial situation of local governments should constrain public investment.

EUROZONE

After a slight contraction in GDP in Q4 2022, the euro area returned to slightly positive growth in the first half of 2023. According to the latest figures available, Q1 growth was again revised up (from -0.1% to 0.0% and now to +0.1% q/q), but Q2 growth was downwardly revised to +0.1% q/q, erasing the initially reported technical rebound of +0.3% q/q. The disparate performance between Member States further weakens the overall result. . France and Spain have been doing well, but Germany, Italy and the Netherlands are struggling. The negative effects of monetary tightening should intensify and further slow economic activity, which would stagnate in the second half of 2023, before starting a sluggish recovery. Although it is expected to decline throughout 2023, inflation would remain elevated, slightly exceeding 3% y/y at the end of this year. Illustrating the slowness of the disinflation process, it would still be significantly above the 2% target at the end of 2024 (2.5% y/y), forcing monetary policy to remain in restrictive territory.

FRANCE

French growth significantly surprised on the upside in Q2 2023, with activity accelerating more than expected (+0.5% q/q, after stagnation in Q1 and a modestly positive Q4 2022). While household consumption and investment remain depressed, this rebound has been supported by business investment and, above all, exports. A negative correction is likely in Q3. Inflation rebounded in August (5.7% y/y according to the harmonized measure), driven by energy prices, but which does not call into question its slow downward trajectory. Because of rising interest rates, household demand should remain subdued in 2023, weighing on our GDP growth forecast (0.7% in 2023, compared to 2.5% in 2022).

INTEREST RATES AND EXCHANGE RATES

Interest and exchange rates

In the US, after having skipped the June meeting, the Federal Reserve proceeded, as expected, to a further 25bp rate hike in July. This increase would be the last in our view, but uncertainty remains given the still elevated core inflation and the resilience of activity and the labour market to date. In any case, these factors argue against a rate cut before the beginning of 2024. The residual uncertainty on the policy rate peak is reflected in long-term rates, which remained on an upward trend early September. However, as inflation falls further and the prospect of monetary easing in 2024 rises, long-term rates should resume their decline soon.

Unlike the Fed, the ECB did not pause in June but, like the Fed, it increased its key rates by 25bp in July (deposit rate at 3.75%, refinancing rate at 4.25%). We are of the view that this increase would mark the end of the ECB's tightening cycle, considering the effects of the monetary tightening already underway. But it is not yet certain that it will be the last, given the absence of a tangible fall at this stage of core inflation. As part of its monetary tightening, the ECB also announced a complete halt, starting in July 2023, of its reinvestments under the APP. European long-term rates are trending up, moving in line with US rates, but in a more muted way. They are expected to ease gradually as the fall in core inflation should become more visible, dissipating uncertainty over the continuation of monetary tightening.

On 27 July, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) adjusted its yield curve control policy (YCC) by allowing a wider fluctuation in 10-year sovereign interest rates around the target of 0.5%Further adjustments to the YCC cannot be excluded, given that the country currently faces the fastest rate of inflation since the early 1990s. Nevertheless, the BoJ is unlikely to increase its policy rates this year, but a rise is expected in 2024.

We expect the dollar to weaken somewhat versus the euro. The dollar’s valuation is expensive and next year the Federal Reserve should ease earlier and more than the ECB. We expect the yen to remain around current levels in the near term before strengthening versus the dollar based on the expected monetary divergence between the Fed and the BoJ in 2024.

THE ECONOMISTS WHO PARTICIPATED IN THIS ARTICLE

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