Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Global Economy News Briefing For September 4, 2025


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Today's global economic outlook highlights diverging signals: Europe faces deepening construction weakness and fragile retail trends, while Japan offers rare momentum through stronger household spending and wage growth.

Mexico shows structural investment stress, and Canada reports modest trade improvements. Norway's current account narrows on weaker energy flows, while Switzerland's inflation stagnates. Spain, despite retail losses, still finds bond market support.

The following ranking orders today's developments by geopolitical importance, reflecting their potential impact on global markets and policy watchers.
1. Japan's Domestic Recovery Gains Momentum
Japan reported +2.2% annual household spending growth in July, alongside 3.0% wage income growth. Rising consumer demand in the world's third-largest economy signals potential support for regional trade and could offset weakening Chinese demand.
2. Eurozone Construction Contraction Deepens
Germany's construction PMI fell to 46.0, Italy hit 47.7, and France held at 46.7. The eurozone composite rose to 46.7, but all remain below 50, pointing to sustained downturns. Given Europe's central role in global supply chains, this contraction underscores economic fragility.
3. Spanish Retail Weakness and Bond Auction Stability
Spain's retail sales fell –0.5% MoM, slowing sharply from June's growth. Yet, 3-year and 7-year bonds priced at 2.204% and 2.734% respectively, reflecting steady investor demand and signaling continued confidence in eurozone debt markets.


4. UK Construction Weakness and Auto Decline
The UK's Construction PMI rose slightly to 45.5 but remains in contraction. Passenger car registrations fell 2% YoY to 82,908 units, highlighting demand-side weakness in one of Europe's largest consumer markets.
5. Norway's Current Account Surplus Narrows
Norway's Q2 current account slipped to NOK 217.9 billion from 285.3 billion, largely on weaker energy exports. As Europe 's energy supplier, this signals both reduced revenues and possible price adjustments for global gas markets.
6. Mexico's Investment Decline Signals Structural Risk
Mexico's gross fixed investment fell –6.4% YoY in June, extending May's –7.1% drop. Persistent weakness in capital formation raises concerns about competitiveness and regional supply chain integration.
7. Canada's Trade Deficit Narrows Slightly
Canada posted a July trade deficit of CAD –4.94 billion, narrower than June's –5.98 billion. Small shifts in exports and imports suggest stability but limited global spillover effects.
8. Swiss Inflation Stagnates, Jobless Rate Edges Up
Switzerland's August CPI remained flat at 0.2% YoY, while unemployment nudged up to 2.8% (n.s.a.). Though minor, the data reflect weakening domestic dynamics in one of Europe's financial hubs.

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