Business World

Why the worst may be over for the global economy

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LONDON — The world economy may be the rockiest it’s been since the financial crisis, yet there are reasons to expect the current slowdown will prove short-lived.

Bloomberg Economics, Deutsche Bank AG and Morgan Stanley are among those whose economists reckon the slide will bottom out in this quarter or next before an accelerati­on later in the year.

“Put the Federal Reserve pause, trade truce and China stimulus together and we’re looking for a trough in the first quarter and very moderate pick up ahead,” said Tom Orlik, chief economist at Bloomberg Economics. CENTRAL BANKS TO THE RESCUE Led by the Fed, many central banks have either held back on tightening monetary policy or introduced fresh stimulus, soothing investor fears of a slowdown.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell says he and colleagues will be patient on raising interest rates again, while European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has ruled out doing so this year and unveiled a new batch of cheap loans for banks.

Elsewhere, authoritie­s in Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom are among those to have adopted a wait-and-see approach.

China, at its National People’s Congress this month, signaled a willingnes­s to ease monetary and fiscal policies to support economic expansion.

Having tightened at the end of last year — in part prompting the Fed to rethink the outlook — financial conditions have loosened up.

After touching a two-and-ahalf-year low in December, the Bloomberg US Financial Conditions Index — which measures the overall level of financial stress in money, bond and equity markets — has since rebounded.

Reflecting a more positive investor view, there’s also been a rebound in stocks this year. The S&P 500 has gained almost 20% from its December low, while the Shanghai Composite is up about 22%.

An easing in US dollar strength versus 2018 has also given relief to emerging markets, taking some pressure off policy makers to guard against capital flight.

Credit numbers for China and Japan in February were up strongly from a year ago.

IHS Markit’s indicator of global growth rose in February from a 28-month low and, encouragin­gly, there was an improvemen­t in the gauge of demand.

Its measure of worldwide services also picked up in February for the first time in three months.

Citigroup’s surprise index for the euro area — which has been one of the weak spots of the global economy — has rebounded to its best reading in almost five months.

In China, a measure of new orders in the manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers Index improved last month, and Germany got good news about an increase in water levels on the River Rhine.

A drop last year disrupted barge traffic, hitting industry and adding to the temporary factors that pushed the economy near a recession.

TRADING PLACES

Investors have been keen to blame political discord, and especially the global trade war, for prompting businesses and consumers to retrench.

One measure of unpredicta­bility in 20 countries entered the year at a record level.

But US President Donald Trump decided against imposing another round of tariffs on China on March 1 and there are signs that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping may soon be able to strike a trade deal.

A model designed by the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance (IIF) to track US trade in real time showed signs of stabilizin­g from early this year.

“Global trade fears are overblown, as are concerns that global growth may slow significan­tly,” according to Robin Brooks, the IIF’s chief economist.

Even with February’s disappoint­ing US employment report, the global labor market continues to tighten, providing reason to hope consumers will keep spending.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. estimates unemployme­nt in developed nations is now at a 40-year low of five percent and set to fall further. That has the bank predicting wages will grow 3.2% in the final quarter of this year, the fastest for any point in the decade-long expansion and almost a percentage point faster than the same period of 2017.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund is still predicting global growth of 3.7% this year and 3.5% in 2019, a pretty good clip for this stage of the expansion.

Deutsche Bank strategist Alan Ruskin also argues there is reason to be more upbeat than the headlines suggest. China’s economy, for example, is five times its size in 2000, meaning a six percent growth rate now is equivalent to 30 percent back then.

“When making even longerterm comparison­s, absolute levels and changes become even more important than the limited perspectiv­e provided by percentage changes,” he wrote in a note to clients this week. —

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