China recorded real GDP growth of 5.2% y/y in Q4, faster than the 4.9% seen in Q3, but still undershooting projections of a 5.3% expansion. This puts full-year 2023 growth at 5.2%, so beating the official target of 5.0%, but still fairly weak for the economy which has struggled to regain speed following the pandemic reopening, with concerns around the property sector in particular weighing on growth. Growth remained under pressure through the final months of the year and December data from China was mixed – retail sales expanded 7.4% y/y, missing the 8.0% consensus prediction but industrial production saw growth of 6.8% y/y in December, beating the predicted 6.6%. The consensus prediction for growth this year is 4.5%.
Wage growth in the UK has continued to slow sharply, with average weekly earnings over the 3m/3m measure to November coming in at 6.5%, down from 7.2% the previous month and slower than the predicted 6.8% as well. Stripping out bonuses, the measure was at 6.6%, also from 7.2% previously. This is positive news for UK policy makers, as growth in real wages (CPI inflation was 3.9% y/y in November and projected to slow further to 3.8% in December data released today) should support a pick-up in activity. Slowing wage growth should also soften inflationary pressures in the months ahead, enabling the Bank of England to start easing policy later in the year. Meanwhile headline unemployment stood at 4.2% in the three-month period to November, although the ONS data is still experimental under the new method.
The recent slowdown in the German economy was underscored by the confirmation earlier this week that the economy contracted 0.3% last year, and in the current situation ZEW survey released yesterday there was no improvement in the near-term outlook as the index came in at -77.3 for January, from -77.1 the previous month. However, the expectations survey rose from 12.8 in December to 15.2, well above the predicted 11.7 as respondents looked through the immediate challenges to hopefully easier times ahead as inflation eases and monetary policy is expected to loosen.
A number of Egyptian banks have limited cash withdrawals abroad as the country’s ongoing shortage of FX deepens. Al Baraka Bank has stopped all foreign withdrawal according to its website, as has EG Bank, while others have limited withdrawals to USD 50.
Canada’s CPI inflation was 3.4% y/y in December, in line with expectations and up from 3.1% the previous month. Prices fell 0.3% m/m. Core inflation accelerated, however, with the trim core at 3.7% y/y, up from 3.5% in November and above the predicted 3.4%, reducing the likelihood of a cut by the Bank of Canada in April.
Today’s Economic Data and Events
11:00 UK CPI inflation, December, % y/y. Forecast: 3.8%
17:30 US retail sales, December, % m/m. Forecast: 0.4%
18:15 US industrial production, December, % m/m. Forecast: 0.0%
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