This article pretty much covers the push back we’ve been receiving on our ECB call, ranging from growth to political blocking and Strait reopening hopes.
There are still dovish views that can be flushed away by Lagarde and the ECB’s projections Thursday. https://t.co/Tp0dq7EC1c
This is something people pointing to China's demographic decline often forget: for the next few years - at least until the late 2030s (if not early 2040s) - the number of people entering the workforce in China is set to INCREASE, not decrease.
For instance do you know which years recorded the highest birth rates in China in the 21st century? It was, in order, 2012 (14.57 births per thousand), 2014 (13.83) and 2016 (13.57). (src: https://t.co/cTotmhsxLj)
This results in the fact that, as you can see in the age pyramid below 👇, the 10-14 age cohort (kids born in 2012-2016) is actually **larger** than the 3 cohorts preceding it.
2016 kids - for instance - will reach 18 in 2034, and those studying at university (the majority of them) will reach the workforce at the very end of the 2030s, and the early 2040s.
The only cohort that's really dramatically shrunk compared to others is the 0-4 one, meaning China will really only start to have significant significant drops in workforce entrants in the late 2040s.
@ClausVistesen Very interesting and well written piece! Saw the other day that birth rates are diverging in the US but the other way around, however. Keen to get your view on that!
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In the aftermath of the shock, we were early in calling for the commencement of rate hikes, beginning in Jun for the ECB - after the pullback in oil prices allowed the ECB to "skip" an Apr hike - Jul for the BoE, and Sep for the Fed.
Markets are now converging on these calls.
Markets are turning increasingly hawkish on central banks, as we have been arguing. Pricing of back-to-back ECB hikes has increased, from 0% last week, to 30%. Meanwhile, that of a Sep Fed hike, our modal view, is on the rise, now at 25%. We think both still possess upside.
CHART OF THE DAY: Perhaps the most important story in global markets / geopolitics right now.
China's oil imports plunged to ~6.6m b/d in May, according to @Vortexa data, down ~38% vs 2025 average (or ~4m b/d).
I wrote this @Opinion column in early May: https://t.co/XK71uh81m1
A 2nd FOMC voter—Dallas's Lorie Logan—indicates rate hikes "this year" may be warranted
"I am increasingly concerned that higher interest rates could be necessary later this year to fully restore price stability...."
@samueltombs@KevRGordon Sure, in isolation one-month indications from JOLTs is always subject to a lot of noise, but we're also seeing a pick-up in sectoral payrolls on a trend basis - seems like the AI disruption fears were overblown.
EZ May inflation showed Core - which is a better reflection of the inflation environment given fiscal offsets for energy in Ger, Spain, Italy etc - rising from 2.2% to nearly 2.6% y/y.
This brings the Q2 tracking up to 2.4%, i.e. above the ECB's Mar "baseline" and "adverse"
In this light, understandable that the Governing Council have become more vocal in supporting a 25bp hike - in line with our views since mid-Mar. A 50bp looks off the cards at this point due to Brent <$100 and inflation expectations stabilising for now.
Just received a section 13 from the landlord that the government legislation has nullified our previous 3-year contract, subject to increases of just CPI, in favour of a 7.5% rent increase this year.
@UKLabour@Uma_Kumaran was this the intention of your actions?
@ClausVistesen No cost for the challenger I believe - but yeah I agree, especially when the rent increase is near £200pcm.
Tbh me too, I've been with them for 6 years no issue, now they have cladding bills and they're searching the sofa for pennies.
@ClausVistesen Would also flag that it is very coincidental that this is all occurring while they try and wiggle out of a massive fire safety bill - the two are obviously intertwined.
For reference though, I do see tribunal costs of referral at £47
@ClausVistesen I 100% will be. I'm just flagging as this is the unintended consequences of their actions, and this act of bad faith by the property manager should be exemplified especially as I live in an urban regen project.