Global Economy
United States
At present, all focus is on debt in the US as the world waits
patiently for a resolution to the debt ceiling stalemate, which if
reached by August 2nd, will see the US government avoid an
unprecedented default. This follows disappointing data in May
continued to cause question over the strength of the US economic
recovery with unemployment ticking back up to 9.1% and the
Institute for Supply Management Manufacturing index recording
its largest monthly decline since 1984.
Europe
Like the US sovereign debt continues to plague the European
peripheral countries and significant concerns have again escalated.
The concern has been that any Greek defaults might set off a global
credit crisis much as Lehman's failure did in 2008. However
French and German banks only have Greek debt exposure of US$53
billion and US$34 billion respectively, which is manageable.
The real concern is French banks' US$590 billion exposure and
German banks' US$499 billion exposure to Ireland, Portugal,
Spain and Italian debt. An uncontrolled Greek default (which to
date looks to have been averted) could lead to a sharp rise in
funding costs for these problem debt countries, making it harder
for them to reduce debts, possibly leading to a run on exposed
banks. Banks may then stop lending to each other, as occurred in
the global financial crisis. All of which could lead to another
credit freeze and disruptions to global economic activity, as
occurred after Lehman's failure.
Asia
Economic growth in China and India continues, albeit at a slower
pace as can be observed by the following chart. The People's
Bank of China [PBOC] lifted banks' reserve
requirements again in May aimed at draining excess liquidity out of
the economy in its continued effort to bring inflation under
control.
The challenge, for both economies, remains to ward off inflationary
pressures whilst at the same time avoiding a very sharp slowing in
the economy, which would not only be detrimental to their
respective economies, but would also have potentially sharp
negative consequences for global growth and financial and commodity
markets.
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Also not surprisingly Japan's economy fell back into recession
with a second consecutive quarter of negative growth recorded in
the March quarter where GDP fell 0.9 per cent. The magnitude of the
decline can be attributed mostly to the March 11 earthquake which
caused declines in private consumption, capital spending and
exports.
Domestic Economy
The Australian economy experienced an interesting March quarter
with a 1.2 per cent fall in GDP, a 1.6 per cent jump in CPI and an
unemployment rate remaining steady at 4.9 per cent. Although the
direction of growth and inflation was expected it was the magnitude
of the numbers that was a surprise.
The fall in growth has since been largely explained by the negative
impact of global natural disasters on the demand for Australian
exports, which fell by 8.7 per cent quarter-onquarter. It is argued
that the GDP results seem encouraging if they consider domestic
demand in isolation, which actually rose by a solid 1.3 per cent
quarter-on-quarter. The increase in inflation puts the annualised
CPI number at 3.3 per cent, outside the Reserve Bank's 2 to 3
per cent management bracket
Investment Markets
Global equity markets have all fallen in recent months as
investors fear all the issues discussed above. The Australian
market is not immune to the threat of a global slowdown and when
coupled with concerns over domestic inflation and growth has also
been driven lower.
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With US and euro-zone debt being the major theme, the uncertainty
around the global recovery is likely to linger for some time and we
are likely to see increased short term volatility in investments
markets. This continued volatility in financial markets highlights
the changed world we live in.
The global financial crisis has left the world with a hangover of
excessive debt levels and extreme monetary policy settings in
advanced countries, excessively easy monetary conditions in
emerging countries and very skittish investors prone to jump at the
slightest hint of any potential problem. This indicates volatility
will remain high for some time, highlighting the increased
importance of asset allocation decisions for investors.
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