Dubai CPI rose to 3.8% y/y in September, up from 2.3% in August. On an annual basis there were notable increases in the food and beverages, education, and clothing and footwear categories. The largest influence on the September figure was however the transport sub-component. On the month the pace of deflation in the transport slowed to -0.4% y/y from -11.2% y/y in August. On a month-on-month basis headline inflation rose 0.9% in September from 0.5% in August.
There was further evidence of a cooling in the UK labour market, with the number of payroll employees declining 11,000 in September. This came on top of a revision to the August print, which now suggests that the number of payroll employees fell 8,000 rather than the 1,000 drop originally published. There was also a fall in job vacancies in the three months to September, declining to 0.988m from 0.998m in the three months to August. This weakening in labour demand appears to be reflected in wage growth, with earnings rising at a slower pace. Headline average weekly earnings rose 8.1% in the three months to August, when compared to the same period in 2022, down from 8.5% 3m/YoY in July.
Germany’s ZEW survey of investor expectations rose sharply in October, beating expectations. Although the forward-looking survey measure increased from -11.4 in September to a value of -1.1 in October, it remains at a low level. The improvement was likely driven by the majority of respondents being of the view that interest rates have reach a peak. The current conditions index in contrast painted a more negative picture of the German economy, declining from a value of -79.4 in September to -79.9 in October.
Growth in September’s US retail sales surprised on the upside, growing 0.7% m/m, compared to consensus expectations for a 0.3% gain. The figures are unadjusted for inflation and will therefore have been boosted by higher gasoline prices. However, even when gasoline and automobiles are excluded, retail sales growth remained robust at 0.6% m/m, pointing to continued resilience in consumer spending in Q3.
Industrial production data for September provided additional evidence of strength in the US economy, growing 0.3% m/m. This outturn was higher than expectations for activity to have been unchanged on the month, and an uptick from the 0% m/m growth recorded August. A variety of sub-sectors saw solid growth including a 0.4% m/m rise in mining output on the back of higher crude production.
There was further evidence of a stabilization in Chinese economic activity, with better-than-expected GDP, retail sales and Industrial production numbers published this morning. Chinese GDP rose 4.9% y/y in Q3, better than the 4.5% growth that had been expected. While this is lower than the 6.3% y/y growth seen in Q2, it is worth noting that the Q2 figure was flattered by Covid lockdown base effects. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, Q3 GDP rose 1.3%, up from a downwardly revised 0.5% in Q2. In addition, industrial production rose 4.5% y/y in September, slightly higher than consensus expectations for a 4.4% gain. Retail sales also improved, gaining 5.5% y/y in September, up from 4.6% the month prior. The residential property market nonetheless continues to act as a drag on economic activity, with property investment falling by a worse-than-expected 9.1% y/y YTD in September.
Today’s Economic Data and Events
Fixed Income
FX
Equities
Commodities