Macro

Brief Macro: Understanding the Widening of the U.S. Trade Deficit and more

In this briefing:

  1. Understanding the Widening of the U.S. Trade Deficit
  2. Weak February Payrolls But U.S. Labor Market Is Still Tightening
  3. Philippines: February Inflation Eases Back to BSP’s Inflation Target Range
  4. Japan – Chinese Flu

1. Understanding the Widening of the U.S. Trade Deficit

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  • The widening of the U.S. merchandise trade deficit to a record $891 billion in 2018 received considerable attention in the financial press this week but the criticisms that this widening represented either weakness in the U.S. economy or a failure of U.S. economic policy are misplaced.
  • We expected a widening of the trade deficit in 2018 as a consequence of the tax cut and stronger economic growth.  Higher investment spending and a wider fiscal deficit were all but certain to lead to a larger trade gap.
  • The dollar has firmed as the trade gap has widened over the last four years, which suggests the net overseas demand for U.S. assets has been rising faster than the current account deficit.

2. Weak February Payrolls But U.S. Labor Market Is Still Tightening

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Nonfarm payrolls rose only 20,000 in February but the unemployment rate declined to 3.8% from 4.0%.  Average hourly earnings increased 0.4% and year-over-year wage growth picked up.  Monthly payroll changes are highly volatile and the three-month average of payroll growth is 186,000, which is still solid.  Also, most metrics show that the labor market tightened in February.

3. Philippines: February Inflation Eases Back to BSP’s Inflation Target Range

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  • Better-than-expected February inflation of 3.8%YoY wasn’t just a ‘base effect’ result. Broad food and transport CPI readings probably benefited from a year-ago, statistical high. It’s not the same for most of the non-food CPI items like rental & household utilities, and restaurant & miscellaneous goods & services that comprise discretionary expenditures. Lacking the base effect, inflation within this group seemed to have shed off last year’s price catalysts led by TRAIN’s excise hikes, high oil prices and supply shocks. 
  • Based on the PSA’s seasonally adjusted data, headline inflation’s annualized pace was a benign 1.2%.
  • Our updated monthly time series extrapolation showed headline inflation bottoming out at 1.3%YoY-1.4%YoY in September-October this year.
  • Sustained liquidity tightness amid inflation’s benign pace with a trajectory settling in the BSP’s target range could facilitate a staggered bank reserve ratio cut of 2% starting 2Q19.   
  • With the pro-growth bias of newly appointed BSP chief Benjamin Diokno (former Budget Secretary), the likelihood of a 25bp policy rate cut has been elevated in 3Q19 when inflation this year is expected to hit rock bottom and the ensuing size of positive, real interest rates could risk threatening growth.
  • Considering potential macro upsides this year, e.g., inflation bottoming out alongside consumption recovery, buying risk assets on dips is still the norm.

4. Japan – Chinese Flu

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By Konstantinos Venetis, Senior Economist

  • Japan skirts recession but near-term prospects remain weak
  • Deflationary headwinds to persist in H1, threatening business spending
  • Recovery likely in late 2019 as world trade finds a firmer footing

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