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Global Economy Briefing - October 1, 2025
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) With China and Hong Kong closed for National Day, the center of gravity shifted to energy and inflation.
OPEC gathered against a backdrop of U.S. data showing a broad inventory build: crude +1.792 million barrels, gasoline +4.125 million, refinery utilization down 1.6 percentage points, and Cushing stocks -0.271 million.
The mix points to softer refinery runs and a less-tight market heading into the Northern Hemisphere winter.
Europe's inflation cooled only slowly. Eurozone headline CPI ticked up to 2.2% year over year in September, core held at 2.3%, and the ex-energy/food gauge was 2.4%.
All were up just 0.1% on the month, but Germany's 10-year Bund auction cleared at a fatter 2.720%, reminding investors that disinflation isn't victory.
Manufacturing was mixed: Germany 49.5 (better than feared), France 48.2, Italy 49.0, Spain 51.5, euro area 49.8.
The U.K. stayed in contraction at 46.2 even as house prices rose 0.5% m/m and 2.2% y/y. Switzerland's PMI slid to 46.3 and retail sales fell 0.2% y/y.
America's cooling signals multiplied. ADP showed private payrolls down 32,000 in September.
ISM manufacturing eased to 49.1, with new orders 48.9 but employment improving to 45.3; S&P Global's PMI sat at 52.0.
High mortgage rates bit hard: applications fell 12.7% while the 30-year rate rose to 6.46%.
Yet consumer demand wasn't absent-annualized vehicle sales reached 16.40 million-and GDPNow still estimates 3.8% growth for Q3.
Oil builds complicate the near-term inflation outlook as ISM prices paid remained elevated at 61.9.
Asia's policy tone stayed steady. India held the repo at 5.50%, CRR at 4.00%, and reverse repo at 3.35%; its factory PMI cooled to a still-strong 57.7. South Korea's CPI re-accelerated to 2.1% y/y.
Japan's monetary base contracted 6.1% y/y and a 10-year JGB auction tailed at 1.635%, underscoring a slow exit from ultra-easy policy.
Australia's trade surplus shrank to A$1.825 billion as exports fell 7.8% m/m and imports rose 3.2%.
The Americas' factory pulse weakened. Brazil's PMI dropped to 46.5 and registered a net foreign-exchange inflow of $1.141 billion.
Mexico printed 49.60 and Canada 47.7; the Bank of Canada released meeting deliberations later.
European autos saw a mechanical rebound from August's slump, with euro-area registrations up 38.9% m/m and 16.4% y/y; Italy was up 4.1% y/y.
The story behind the story
Three forces are pulling in different directions. First, energy: inventories rising while OPEC meets suggests supply discipline will decide whether oil stokes or soothes inflation into year-end.
Second, disinflation is slowing near 2% in advanced economies; that keeps real rates high even if central banks are on hold, restraining housing and capex.
Third, manufacturing is diverging: the U.S. shows demand resilience in autos but softer new orders; Europe is stabilizing at a low level; parts of Asia (India, Korea) remain comparatively firm.
Add tighter long-term financing-see Bunds at 2.72% and JGBs drifting higher-and you get a world economy that's still expanding but increasingly rate-sensitive and uneven across regions and sectors.
Why this matters to readers everywhere
Oil outcomes over the next few weeks will shape winter heating costs and headline inflation prints globally.
A stickier core in Europe, plus firm U.S. prices-paid, argues against quick policy easing.
Meanwhile, fading factory momentum outside a handful of bright spots raises the risk that 2026 growth will depend more on services and government spending than on trade and industry.
What to watch next
Bottom line
The global cycle is cooling, not collapsing: energy policy, slow-moving disinflation, and tighter long-term funding are now the main plot.
Whether growth merely downshifts-or stalls-will hinge on OPEC's next move and the breadth of the U.S. labor slowdown.
OPEC gathered against a backdrop of U.S. data showing a broad inventory build: crude +1.792 million barrels, gasoline +4.125 million, refinery utilization down 1.6 percentage points, and Cushing stocks -0.271 million.
The mix points to softer refinery runs and a less-tight market heading into the Northern Hemisphere winter.
Europe's inflation cooled only slowly. Eurozone headline CPI ticked up to 2.2% year over year in September, core held at 2.3%, and the ex-energy/food gauge was 2.4%.
All were up just 0.1% on the month, but Germany's 10-year Bund auction cleared at a fatter 2.720%, reminding investors that disinflation isn't victory.
Manufacturing was mixed: Germany 49.5 (better than feared), France 48.2, Italy 49.0, Spain 51.5, euro area 49.8.
The U.K. stayed in contraction at 46.2 even as house prices rose 0.5% m/m and 2.2% y/y. Switzerland's PMI slid to 46.3 and retail sales fell 0.2% y/y.
America's cooling signals multiplied. ADP showed private payrolls down 32,000 in September.
ISM manufacturing eased to 49.1, with new orders 48.9 but employment improving to 45.3; S&P Global's PMI sat at 52.0.
High mortgage rates bit hard: applications fell 12.7% while the 30-year rate rose to 6.46%.
Yet consumer demand wasn't absent-annualized vehicle sales reached 16.40 million-and GDPNow still estimates 3.8% growth for Q3.
Oil builds complicate the near-term inflation outlook as ISM prices paid remained elevated at 61.9.
Asia's policy tone stayed steady. India held the repo at 5.50%, CRR at 4.00%, and reverse repo at 3.35%; its factory PMI cooled to a still-strong 57.7. South Korea's CPI re-accelerated to 2.1% y/y.
Japan's monetary base contracted 6.1% y/y and a 10-year JGB auction tailed at 1.635%, underscoring a slow exit from ultra-easy policy.
Australia's trade surplus shrank to A$1.825 billion as exports fell 7.8% m/m and imports rose 3.2%.
The Americas' factory pulse weakened. Brazil's PMI dropped to 46.5 and registered a net foreign-exchange inflow of $1.141 billion.
Mexico printed 49.60 and Canada 47.7; the Bank of Canada released meeting deliberations later.
European autos saw a mechanical rebound from August's slump, with euro-area registrations up 38.9% m/m and 16.4% y/y; Italy was up 4.1% y/y.
The story behind the story
Three forces are pulling in different directions. First, energy: inventories rising while OPEC meets suggests supply discipline will decide whether oil stokes or soothes inflation into year-end.
Second, disinflation is slowing near 2% in advanced economies; that keeps real rates high even if central banks are on hold, restraining housing and capex.
Third, manufacturing is diverging: the U.S. shows demand resilience in autos but softer new orders; Europe is stabilizing at a low level; parts of Asia (India, Korea) remain comparatively firm.
Add tighter long-term financing-see Bunds at 2.72% and JGBs drifting higher-and you get a world economy that's still expanding but increasingly rate-sensitive and uneven across regions and sectors.
Why this matters to readers everywhere
Oil outcomes over the next few weeks will shape winter heating costs and headline inflation prints globally.
A stickier core in Europe, plus firm U.S. prices-paid, argues against quick policy easing.
Meanwhile, fading factory momentum outside a handful of bright spots raises the risk that 2026 growth will depend more on services and government spending than on trade and industry.
What to watch next
Friday's U.S. payrolls for confirmation of the ADP softness.
Any OPEC guidance on quotas and compliance as U.S. inventories build.
Eurozone country-level inflation details and the next round of wage settlements.
India's October PMI to see if the gentle cooling continues.
Australia's October trade to confirm whether the export dip was a blip or a turn.
Bottom line
The global cycle is cooling, not collapsing: energy policy, slow-moving disinflation, and tighter long-term funding are now the main plot.
Whether growth merely downshifts-or stalls-will hinge on OPEC's next move and the breadth of the U.S. labor slowdown.

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