Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Global Economy Briefing: October 8, 2025


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Holiday closures across China and South Korea kept Asian liquidity thin, while fresh readings flagged a sharp production setback in Germany, softer U.S. housing demand, and still-uneven inflation signals in commodities and surveys. Rates markets digested higher auction yields in the U.S. and steady prints in the UK.
United States
Mortgage applications fell 4.7% week on week as the 30-year rate eased only to 6.43%. A 10-year Treasury auction cleared at 4.117%, above last month's 4.033%, underscoring firmer funding costs.

Energy data were mixed for inflation watchers: crude inventories rose 3.715M barrels, but gasoline stocks fell 1.601M and distillates dropped 2.018M; refinery utilization rose 1.0 percentage point, with crude runs up 0.129M b/d and imports up 0.731M b/d.

Sentiment gauges improved at the margin (Thomson Reuters/Ipsos PCSI 52.86), while Fed speakers stayed in focus ahead of minutes.


Europe & UK
Germany's industrial production sank 4.3% m/m in August (−4.2% y/y), the steepest monthly decline this year, even as September car registrations rose 12.8% y/y.

The UK's five-year gilt auction printed 4.095% again, with BoE FPC minutes watched for financial-stability color.

ECB officials maintained a cautious tone amid weak hard data and tentative survey stabilization. Hong Kong's FX reserves edged down to $419.2B.
Asia
Japan's Economy Watchers current index improved to 47.1, but market pricing continued to shift: the five-year JGB auction yielded 1.233% (from 1.119%).

Portfolio flows showed foreign selling of Japanese bonds and strong foreign buying of equities, highlighting a search for growth exposure as rate expectations evolve.

In Australia, MI inflation expectations ticked up to 4.8%. Regional trading was muted by holidays across North Asia.
Major Emerging Markets
Brazil's September auto production fell 1.5% m/m even as sales jumped 7.9% m/m, signaling resilient retail demand.

The Thomson Reuters/Ipsos index rose to 53.89, but weekly FX flows showed a $1.056B net outflow. Mexico's PCSI firmed to 53.45, while Canada's improved to 48.04.
Commodities & Flows
A U.S. crude build alongside draws in gasoline and distillates pointed to firm end-use demand but looser crude balance, tempering inflation relief.

Higher U.S. term yields and steady UK funding costs kept global financial conditions tight.
Risks and Framing
Europe's industrial slump, tighter U.S. funding, and Japan's shifting rate backdrop keep the outlook uneven.

With China still on holiday, the next catalysts are U.S. inflation and demand data, euro area hard prints, and any further repricing in JGBs that could ripple through global curves.

Energy and shipping costs remain the fastest channels to re-accelerate headline inflation.

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