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Recession-consistent real money weakness

Posted on Tuesday, May 17, 2022 at 08:20AM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | Comments2 Comments

Global* six-month real narrow money momentum turned negative in March and is estimated to have fallen slightly further in April, based on monetary and CPI data covering two-thirds and 90% of the aggregate respectively – see chart 1.

Chart 1

Current weakness is more pronounced than before the 2001 recession and almost on a par with early 2008 before the escalation of the financial crisis.

The leading relationship with the global manufacturing PMI new orders index suggests a sizeable further decline in the latter with no recovery before Q4. A move below 45 would confirm a recession.

The further fall in real narrow money momentum in April reflected another rise in global six-month CPI inflation, with small CPI slowdowns in the US and Eurozone more than offset by pick-ups in China, Japan (Tokyo data) and the UK (estimated), among others – chart 2.

Chart 2

Six-month nominal narrow money growth has been moving sideways since December. With CPI inflation probably peaking, real money momentum could be bottoming. Any recovery, however, could be limited by a renewed nominal money slowdown as central bank policy tightening proceeds.

*G7 plus E7. E7 defined here as BRIC plus Korea, Mexico and Taiwan.

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Reader Comments (2)

Ominous.

May 17, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterRoberto Rosenfeld

Quite a scary looking chart. Perhaps we can have some hope, given much stronger nominal money growth than in 2008 especially.

May 25, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterDavid Cotton

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