G7 leading index fall still consistent with "soft patch"
Monday, September 13, 2010 at 01:51PM
Simon Ward

The OECD's G7 leading indicator index fell by a further 0.4% in July, resulting in the six-month rate of change turning negative – see first chart. The index suggests that industrial output will flat-line or weaken into late 2010.

Based on an earlier slowdown in G7 real narrow money, M1, the OECD measure may decline further in August and September – see previous post. Recent M1 reacceleration, however, may presage a trough in the leading index this autumn, in turn implying that the recovery in industrial output will resume by early 2011.

In contrast to the G7 measure, a leading index covering seven large emerging economies (the "E7") rose by 0.4% in July. The six-month change slowed further but remains consistent with respectable output expansion – second chart.

While the G7 index registered a larger monthly fall in July, E7 monthly momentum seems to be stabilising – third chart. This could be significant since the E7 change led that of the G7 by a month at the trough of the recession and by two months at the 2009 growth peak. Stabilising E7 monthly momentum, in other words, could be a precursor of a slower decline in the G7 index, consistent with the autumn trough suggested by monetary trends.

Article originally appeared on Money Moves Markets (https://moneymovesmarkets.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.