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Global Macro and Markets
G-7 Macro: US data was uninteresting yesterday. Some revisions to home sales figures won’t have been responsible for the markets’ moves yesterday. Today we have the third revision of 1Q24 US GDP – which is one for the history books and not very exciting. Preliminary May US durable goods orders are worth a closer watch, though they are always very choppy. The Eurozone publishes a set of confidence figures for June.
China: Property market support continued yesterday, as Beijing joined other tier 1 cities in easing housing purchase requirements. The minimum downpayment ratio was cut to 20% for first-time buyers, and to 35% for second homes, and the mortgage rate floor was lowered. Similar measures in Shanghai appeared to bolster buying activity and led to Shanghai seeing 0.6% new home price growth in May, the fastest growth of any city. If Beijing’s market shows a similar trend after these measures, it will send an encouraging signal of stabilisation in the core Chinese cities.
China’s industrial profits data will be released this morning. Profits have grown at 4.3% YoY through the first four months of the year, and in general, profits are expected to maintain a gradual recovery trend this year amid a rebound in industrial activity. With that said, high price competition will likely keep profits growth near mid-single-digit growth for most of the year.
Philippines: No change to the overnight borrowing rate is the unanimous view of the Bloomberg consensus for today’s meeting. Month-to-date and quarter-to-date, the PHP has been one of Asia’s weakest currencies. We haven’t heard much more commentary from the BSP Governor about front-running the Fed recently. And for the sake of the PHP, it is probably better if it stays that way.
South Korea: From this month, the Bank of Korea began compiling a new Composite Business Survey Index (CBSI), which is a comprehensive measure of business sentiment. The CBSI is composed of major business survey indices (5 for manufacturing and 4 for non-manufacturing), with 100 set as neutral. Business sentiment appears to have improved for the past three months but remains below the neutral level. The CBSI outlook for all industries rose to 93.1 for July from the previous month’s 91.8 with both manufacturing (+1.4 pt) and non-manufacturing (+1.3 pt) up. In the sub-indices, the strongest growth came from export-oriented businesses (+4 points), while domestic-oriented businesses declined for a second month. Today’s data suggests that export-led growth will continue, while concerns about sluggish domestic growth are growing. Another interesting observation is that the actual index has been higher than the outlook index for the past three to four months. We suspect that the actual performance is better than businesses fear, but the still weak outlook should be negative for business activity as they tend to be more cautious about future investment or hiring.
South Korea: The Composite Business Survey Index gained for three months in a row
Source: Bank of Korea
What to look out for: BSP meeting, US durable goods orders
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