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When the facts change, I’ll shake it off
Keynes supposedly once said, “When the facts change, I mumble something about Taylor Swift, blame the weather, list a load of temporary factors I couldn’t have possibly foreseen, then I change my mind”. It was something like that, anyway. My economic history is a bit hazy these days…And speaking of Taylor, imagine my delight when I discover she’s back performing in London for a second time this weekend. We UK economists have already blamed her twice for our dodgy inflation predictions in this cruel summer. Even Bank of England Governor Bailey said recently that Swift is “interesting” but “not the big story”. Something tells me he won’t be in the front row at Wembley this weekend.Anyway, about those Taylor-made excuses: what if we’re all getting it wrong on the central banks – again?The downside risks are clear. Last week, I mused how there’s a real possibility that central banks have left it too late to start cutting rates. We all seem to agree that rate cuts are needed. How quickly those cuts need to happen is still up for discussion. Markets are becoming less convinced about the need for rapid easing. The panic about an impending US recession has subsided. And the central banks, still reeling from that big inflation surprise of the past few years, are still undeniably cautious about the risk of cutting rates prematurely.So, what might they be worried about? The US Presidential Election is an obvious candidate. Check out our team’s new scenarios explaining how November’s vote could have big implications for the Fed’s easing cycle and generate dramatically different outcomes for financial markets. In short, a victory for Donald Trump could see higher growth and inflation and fewer Fed rate cuts.Over in Europe, policymakers are acutely aware that the downward impact on inflation from food, energy and good prices is starting to fade away. We saw that here in the UK this week. And that’s exposing the fact that services inflation is still uncomfortably high across the continent.In Germany, Carsten points out that despite rising unemployment, there are no signs that unions are scaling back their demands for above-inflation pay rises. The risk is that wage growth will stay high for much of the next year rather than come down as the European Central Bank currently hopes and expects. We’ll get fresh data next week, which, alongside the ECB’s new September projections, will be the most crucial things that will make up the ECB’s minds, according to Mr B.It’s not just services. Shipping prices have been rising consistently this summer, helped by the ongoing disruption in the Red Sea. Higher inventories and lower retail demand have so far contained the impact on consumer prices. But chatting with my colleague Bert, he warns that this could change if the European consumer starts splashing cash on goods again now that purchasing power is steadily improving.A lot of this, it should be said, isn’t necessarily the base case. But it serves as a reminder that the risks facing central banks aren’t all pointing in the same direction right now.It’s an uncertain story, so to say that Jerome Powell’s speech at the Fed’s Jackson Hole conference next week will be pivotal would be a major understatement. James Knightley reckons we’ll get further confirmation that a September rate cut is all but baked in. But could that be a 50-basis point cut? We think it might, but Powell pushed back on this when he was asked back in July. Let’s see if he’s changed his mind.Whatever he tells us next week, the reality is that most roads lead back to the US jobs market. It’s that, and less so inflation, which holds the key to the size of that first cut in September. A move lower in the jobless rate in a few weeks would, James Knightley reckons, tilt the balance back in favour of a smaller move. But keep an eye out for benchmark revisions to the payrolls figures next week. Read what James K says below on how they could signal that the recent jobs data has been less rosy than first thought.Because when the facts change, well, you know what to do.
Chart of the week: Shipping costs have risen sharply this year
Source: Macrobond
THINK Ahead in developed markets
United States (James Knightley)
Jackson Hole Symposium (Thu): This is likely to be used as a platform to confirm that the Federal Reserve now thinks monetary policy is too restrictive and that they can start to lower interest rates. Inflation is looking better behaved, and this is allowing them to put more emphasis on the jobs market, which is showing signs of cooling quite quickly. After the market volatility of ten days ago, financial markets are currently favouring the Fed delivering a 25bp interest rate cut on September 18 following better retail sales numbers and signs of resilience in jobless claims. Nonetheless, there are still important events and data releases that mean a 50bp cut can’t be excluded as a possibility.
Provisional annual benchmark revisions of non-farm payrolls (Wed): Based on tax return data, it could be that the BLS has overstated US employment by perhaps 500,000 in the year to March 2024. This would suggest that the models that the BLS use to compute the change in non-farm payrolls each month, which supplement the survey data they compile, have continued to be too optimistic. Significant revisions and a weak jobs report on September 6 would certainly make the market more aware of the risk of a 50bp Fed rate cut.
Eurozone (Bert Colijn)
Sweden (James Smith)
THINK Ahead for Central and Eastern Europe
Poland (Adam Antoniak)
Hungary (Peter Virovacz)
Turkey (Muhammet Mercan)
Key events in developed markets next week
Source: Refinitiv, ING
Key events in EMEA next week
Source: Refinitiv, INGMore By This Author:EUR/CHF: Swiss Exporters Want It At 0.98 Gold Tops $2,500 For The First Time Czech PPI Picks Up But Production Price Pressures Remain Subdued Overall