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Coco Zhang ... (+2)
  • Coco Zhang
  • James Knightley

North America Construction Outlook: Politics and policy rates test the...

After weathering the 2023 banking stresses and ongoing high interest rate environment, 2024 and beyond is likely to be more challenging. Financing conditions remain restrictive, and political uncertainty is on the rise with US and Mexican Presidential elections. High government deficits further limit the scope for support for the sector

Coco Zhang ... (+2)
  • Coco Zhang
  • James Knightley

North America Construction Outlook: Politics and policy rates test the...

After weathering the 2023 banking stresses and ongoing high interest rate environment, 2024 and beyond is likely to be more challenging. Financing conditions remain restrictive, and political uncertainty is on the rise with US and Mexican Presidential elections. High government deficits further limit the scope for support for the sector

Adam Antoniak ... (+8)
  • Adam Antoniak
  • James Knightley
  • Lynn Song
  • Min Joo Kang
  • Muhammet Mercan
  • Nicky Mapa
  • Peter Virovacz
  • Rob Carnell

Our view on next week's key events

Discover what ING analysts are looking for next week in our global economic calendars

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

Watch: Why we've made big changes to our US outlook

We still think we'll get some interest rate cuts in America this year, but far fewer than we thought just months ago. Here's why our thinking's changed

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

ING Economic Forecasts/April 2024

GDP forecasts: Developed Markets. GDP forecasts: Emerging Markets. CPI forecasts. Policy Rate Forecasts. 3-month Interest Rate Forecasts. 10Y Bond Yield Forecasts. Foreign Exchange Forecasts. Oil and Natural Gas forecasts. Metal forecasts

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

US household spending holds firm

Remarkably strong retail sales numbers for March contradict somewhat weaker survey and credit card spending evidence, but with jobs, inflation and activity all beating expectations the Federal Reserve is in no position to carry through with interest rate cuts anytime soon

James Knightley ... (+4)
  • James Knightley
  • James Smith
  • Lynn Song
  • Min Joo Kang

Our view on next week's key events

Discover what ING analysts are looking for next week in our global economic calendars

Carsten Brzeski ... (+14)
  • Carsten Brzeski
  • Chris Turner
  • Ewa Manthey
  • Frantisek Taborsky
  • James Knightley
  • James Smith
  • Lynn Song
  • Min Joo Kang
  • Padhraic Garvey
  • CFA
  • Peter Virovacz
  • Rafal Benecki
  • Stefan Posea
  • Warren Patterson

ING Monthly: Hello, hello, hello, how low?

We're giving a nod to Nirvana this month, one of the greatest rock bands of all time. And the chorus from Smells Like Teen Spirit could certainly be answered by central banks in the coming weeks. The global economy is certainly showing signs of recovery, although we're far from that 'perfect place of peace and happiness' suggested by the name

Francesco Pesole ... (+2)
  • Francesco Pesole
  • James Knightley

Bank of Canada leaves the door open to a June cut

Interest rate cut expectations have receded everywhere following the US inflation data, but there are subtle dovish incremental shifts within the BoC's commentary that suggest should inflation and unemployment continue with their current momentum then the BoC are open to a June rate cut. The Canadian dollar is facing more downside risks

Francesco Pesole ... (+2)
  • Francesco Pesole
  • James Knightley

Bank of Canada leaves the door open to a June cut

Interest rate cut expectations have receded everywhere following the US inflation data, but there are subtle dovish incremental shifts within the BoC's commentary that suggest should inflation and unemployment continue with their current momentum then the BoC are open to a June rate cut. The Canadian dollar is facing more downside risks

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

US inflation quashes the chances of a June Fed rate cut

US inflation came in at 0.4% MoM for the third consecutive month, more than double the rate we need to consistently hit to bring inflation down to 2% YoY. Expectations for a June Federal Reserve interest rate cut have collapsed with the higher for longer narrative on rates firmly in place. September is going to be the earliest opportunity for any policy easing

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

US jobs strength continues despite survey weakness

The US added 303,000 jobs in March, which is more than anyone was expecting. With next week's inflation likely to remain hot, the prospect of a June rate cut from the Fed looks slim. Nonetheless, with business surveys universally pointing to weakness over the next 3-6 months we do expect to see more evidence of cooling by the summer

Adam Antoniak ... (+7)
  • Adam Antoniak
  • James Knightley
  • James Smith
  • Lynn Song
  • Min Joo Kang
  • Nicky Mapa
  • Peter Virovacz

Our view on next week's key events

Discover what ING analysts are looking for next week in our global economic calendars

Francesco Pesole ... (+2)
  • Francesco Pesole
  • James Knightley

Bank of Canada preview: Why the BoC could open the door to a June rate...

Inflation is converging on target and labour market slack is increasing, but for now, Canada's central bank remains wary. Nonetheless, it doesn't want to cause a recession and we expect the BoC to open the door to a possible June rate cut. We expect CAD to underperform other commodity currencies

Francesco Pesole ... (+2)
  • Francesco Pesole
  • James Knightley

Bank of Canada preview: Why the BoC could open the door to a June rate...

Inflation is converging on target and labour market slack is increasing, but for now, Canada's central bank remains wary. Nonetheless, it doesn't want to cause a recession and we expect the BoC to open the door to a possible June rate cut. We expect CAD to underperform other commodity currencies

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

US service sector price pressures cool as activity slows

The March ISM services index was weaker than predicted while price pressures moderated to four-year lows. With employment remaining in contraction territory this report should boost the case for interest rate cuts, but the breakdown in the relationship with official data means the Federal Reserve will remain wary of moving too soon

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

Subtle signs of a cooling jobs US market will aid the Fed's inflation ...

The number of job vacancies remains elevated, but is moving into better balance with the supply of available workers. Meanwhile a slowing quit rates suggests a broader cooling is happening, which implies a moderation in labour cost growth that will help ease broader inflation fears

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

The return of US manufacturing growth lifts optimism

The ISM manufacturing index surprised everyone by moving into growth territory for the first time since late 2022 with production jumping, new orders rising and inflation pressures increasing. Markets interpreted that as reducing the chances of meaningful Fed rate cuts, but construction was much weaker and there are a lot of jobs numbers still to come

Adam Antoniak ... (+10)
  • Adam Antoniak
  • Bert Colijn
  • James Knightley
  • James Smith
  • Lynn Song
  • Min Joo Kang
  • Muhammet Mercan
  • Nicky Mapa
  • Peter Virovacz
  • Rob Carnell

Our view on next week's key events

Discover what ING analysts are looking for next week in our global economic calendars

James Knightley
  • James Knightley

Weakness in US investment keeps the focus on the consumer

Durable goods orders are a good lead indicator for broader capex spending in the US. Unfortunately, ongoing weakness here suggests investment spending will remain a constraint on overall growth with the US' 2024 economic prospects being determined by the consumer

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