Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Weekly Global Economy Overview: September 1320, 2025


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Monetary policy tilted looser in advanced economies while growth signals stayed mixed. The Fed delivered a widely anticipated 25 bp cut on September 17, citing rising risks to employment and leaving the door open to further easing.

The Bank of England held rates but slowed its bond-selling program to ease pressure on UK gilts. In contrast, the Bank of Japan kept rates steady yet surprised markets with a plan to start selling ETFs and J-REITs-its clearest step toward balance-sheet normalization.

Meanwhile, China's August data disappointed again, reinforcing a“two-speed” global picture: steadier disinflation in Europe and the UK versus lingering domestic demand weakness in China.
United States
The Fed's 25 bp move to a 4.00–4.25% range was framed as risk management given softer labor momentum; one governor dissented for a bigger cut. Hard data were mixed: August retail sales rose 0.6% m/m, but housing starts fell 8.5% with single-family down 7%, underscoring a cooler construction cycle even as mortgage rates drift lower.

Industrial production edged up 0.1% as autos rebounded. Markets ended the week with higher long-term yields and a slightly stronger dollar, a reminder that looser policy doesn't automatically translate into easier financial conditions.
Europe & UK
The BoE held Bank Rate at 4% and slowed QT (cutting annual gilt sales to £70bn) as August CPI stuck at 3.8%-well above target-while services inflation eased a touch.

UK retail sales surprised to the upside in August (+0.5% m/m), hinting at some resilience despite weak confidence.

In the euro area, August inflation held near 2% and July external balances remained in surplus, with German ZEW expectations rebounding even as the current-conditions gauge stayed very weak.

Net-net: Europe keeps disinflating with growth still fragile, so central bankers are cautious about further cuts.


Asia
Japan's“hawkish hold” stood out: policy rate unchanged, but the BoJ will begin selling ETFs (~¥330bn/yr) and J-REITs, with two board dissents signaling openness to future hikes.

China's August prints missed: industrial output 5.2% y/y and retail sales 3.4% y/y, unemployment nudged up to 5.3%, and new-home prices fell again-Beijing left a key policy rate unchanged on September 18.

The region's growth impulse is therefore uneven, with Japan inching toward normalization while China's drag persists.
Major emerging markets
Brazil kept the Selic at 15% for a second meeting as inflation eased slightly; guidance stayed vigilant.

Turkey cut 250 bp to 40.5%, extending a rapid easing cycle despite still-elevated inflation.

These divergent stances reflect domestic priorities: Brazil guarding credibility after past price spikes; Turkey seeking growth support amid weak demand.
Commodities & flows
Oil retreated into the weekend (Brent ~$67), with demand worries offsetting the typical“rate-cut lift,” though benchmarks were still tracking a second straight weekly gain.

Fund-flow data showed the year's biggest weekly outflows from global equity funds into September 17, suggesting investors used the rally to de-risk even as EM funds attracted modest inflows.
Risks and framing
Global debt remains above 235% of world GDP, limiting fiscal space if growth slows further.

The overall narrative this week: the monetary pivot has started (US), is cautious (UK/ECB), or is normalizing in a different way (Japan), while China's weakness is the main growth headwind.

Watch how financial conditions evolve-if yields and the dollar keep firming, they could blunt the stimulus from rate cuts even as headline inflation in Europe nears target and US demand holds up unevenly across sectors.

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