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Developed Countries

The ECB increased interest rates and announced the start of its balance sheet wind down; yet, markets took the news as a dovish outcome. Are we really getting close to the end of the ECB’s tightening campaign? How asset prices will react?

We remain constructive on the economy and equities in the near term because consumers show no sign of hunkering down, US homeowners are largely impervious to higher mortgage rates and our latest survey of storefront occupancies on Lower Fifth Avenue highlighted some encouraging developments.

US personal spending grew at a constant 0.6% m/m rate in September, beating expectations of 0.4%. Spending on services led the overall growth, though goods spending also contributed positively, reversing the prior two months’ downtrend. Notably, real personal…
As expected, the Bank of Japan maintained a dovish policy stance at its Friday meeting. It left the policy rate unchanged at -0.1% and kept the cap on 10-year bond yields. However, the central bank revised up its CPI inflation forecasts for the 2022, 2023,…
Preliminary estimates indicate that German GDP growth accelerated by 0.3% q/q in Q3 from 0.1% q/q in Q2 and against expectations it would contract. The performance of the German economy is all the more notable that not only was it driven by consumption (CPI…
According to BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service, falling inflation will allow bond yields to decline in the major economies over the next few quarters. Structurally, however, a depletion of the global savings glut could put upward pressure on…
Preliminary estimates indicate that US GDP grew by an annualized 2.6% in Q3, following two consecutive quarters of negative growth, and beating expectations of 2.4%. Net exports, and to a lesser extent, consumption were the main contributors to Q3 GDP growth.…
As expected, the ECB delivered another 75bp rate hike on Thursday. It also announced changes to the TLTRO terms and conditions – raising the borrowing costs of the facility, and offering banks an early repayment option. The market reaction suggests that…

Falling inflation will allow bond yields to decline in the major economies over the next few quarters. As such, we recommend that investors shift their duration stance from underweight to neutral over a 12 month-and-longer horizon and to overweight over a 6-month horizon. Structurally, however, a depletion of the global savings glut could put upward pressure on yields.

Despite uncertainty and intrusive government policy, natural gas and oil markets have managed to direct much-needed supplies to Europe going into winter. Natgas markets attracted massive LNG inflows – at a cost of record-high prices – that now leave the continent’s on-land storage close to full. A floating LNG market now exists on Europe’s Atlantic Coast – made possible by spot prices at the Dutch Title Transfer Facility trading ~ 40% below 1Q23 futures. The TTF futures contango market structure allows unsold cargoes to be stored on vessels off the coast of Europe until needed this winter via hedging (e.g., buy spot, sell 2- to 3-month-forward futures to lock in storage costs). This expands storage for the continent, leaving the EU in much better shape to weather the loss of Russian pipeline gas.