Thursday, May 14, 2015

Euro Area : the recovery gets traction

The recovery is well engaged in the euro area. Eurostat indicated May 13 that the economy continued to grow during the first quarter of 2015. Its real GDP increased by 0.4%, an heighth consecutive quarter of growth. Moreover, the Purchasing Manager Index (PMI) for the area shows that the economy continued to expand last April. Leading indicators from the Conference Board and the OECD point to the continuation of the recovery in the coming months.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

OECD leading indicators: moderate growth for the world economy in the coming months

The OECD composite leading indicators, published May 12, point to a "positive change in growth momentum" for the euro area and stable growth for Japan, the United Kingdom and India. However, for China, the United States and Canada they show an "easing growth" scenario. Globally, like the Purchasing Managers' Indexes, they let believe that the world economy grows at a moderate pace these days and that this trend will continue in the coming months.


Link to the OECD May 12 press release:
http://www.oecd.org/std/leading-indicators/composite-leading-indicators-cli-oecd-may-2015.htm

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

World Economy : Moderate Growth

The J.P. Morgan Global Manufacturing & Services PMI recent evolution lets believe that the world economy is expanding at a moderate pace these days.

Link to Markit Economics May 6 press release:

http://www.markiteconomics.com/Survey/PressRelease.mvc/8554b240eda74a019242005c06c2b843

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Quebec economy: modest growth in the coming months

Desjardins Leading Index (DLI) showed little progress during last year fourth quarter. It points, at best, to a modest growth for Quebec's economy in the first half of this year.

Link to DLI analysis published February 12:

http://www.desjardins.com/ressources/pdf/ipd0215e.pdf?resVer=1423749038000

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

World economy: is growth too comfortable at just over 3%?

The world economy seems comfortable at just over 3% of real growth. It is not a robust growth, but it is what we get in these years even if the monetary policies are still very accommodatives around the world. It grew by 3.3% in 2013 and 2014. In their respective economic outlook, published last January, the IMF and the World Bank forecast a world GDP (at PPP) growth of around 3.5% this year. It would be just slightly better than in previous years, although leading indicators of the evolution of the economy let believe, for the moment, that growth in the coming months could be less than that.

The OECD monthly leading indicators, published February 9, let anticipate a stable but modest pace of growth in the coming months. The Purchasing Manager Indexes, published by Markit Economics earlier this month, point towards a world growth that goes from modest to moderate early in this year.

The G-20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, at their meeting in Istanbul on February 9 and 10, insist on their preference for a much stronger growth, but they have few concrete solutions, except their usual reform agenda, to offer in a context where risks and uncertainties are still quite high.

To be optimistic: nothing lets believe that the world economy could contract or show a sharp decline of its growth rate in the near future. Even the euro area could avoid such a scenario, although deflation is still at its door with its potential for economic turbulence.


Link to the OECD February 9 press release:

http://www.oecd.org/fr/std/indicateurs-avances/indicateurscompositesavancesdelocde-miseajourfevrier2015.htm

Link to Markit Economics February 4 press release:

http://www.markiteconomics.com/Survey/PressRelease.mvc/aa9e75bbcfac4fea8622b22632b5d42c

Monday, January 12, 2015

OECD leading indicators : no major change

The monthly leading indicators from the OECD, published January 12, do not show any major change of trend in the short term economic outlook for most of the countries.


Link to the OECD press release:
http://www.oecd.org/std/leading-indicators/CLI-Jan15.pdf

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

World Economy: Growth Slowdown

The J.P. Morgan Global Manufacturing & Services PMI, published January 6, shows that the expansion of the world economy, was slowing down at the end of 2014. The recent evolution of the new orders subindex lets believe that this trend continues at the beginning of this year.


Link to Markit Economics press release:
http://www.markiteconomics.com/Survey/PressRelease.mvc/a0012184072a45c19d6ba4077f7c173d