Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Global Economy Briefing: October 16, 2025


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Markets got a split-screen on Thursday: the U.S. manufacturing headline dimmed, Japan's services sector stumbled badly, Europe's funding costs eased, and fuel markets tightened even as crude stocks rose.

It adds up to a world economy still moving-just not in sync.
United States
In the United States, the Philadelphia Fed index swung to −12.8, a weak headline that hides firmer internals: new orders jumped to 18.2, capex intentions to 25.2, and firms' own business conditions to 36.2.

Prices paid were sticky at 49.2 and hiring held modestly positive. Homebuilder sentiment improved (NAHB 37).

On the energy side, refineries throttled back hard-utilization fell 6.7 percentage points-so products drew down (distillates −4.529M barrels, gasoline −0.267M) even as crude rose (+3.524M) and gas storage added 80 bcf.

Translation: end-use demand looks okay, but with less refined supply, fuel prices may stay jumpy. The federal budget swung to a $198B September surplus; front-end bill rates barely moved (4-week 4.030%, 8-week 3.960%).


Europe & UK
Britain posted a gentle rebound: GDP rose 0.1% m/m, industrial output 0.4% (manufacturing 0.7%), while construction slipped −0.3% and the goods deficit widened to £21.2B.

Across the euro area, Italy's CPI stayed contained (1.6% y/y; HICP 1.8%), the bloc's trade surplus shrank to €1.0B, and sovereign funding eased: Spain's 5-, 7-, and 10-year auctions cleared below prior levels; Germany's 30-year printed 3.170%.

That's the market's way of saying growth is fragile, inflation cooler, and the policy path a shade easier.
Asia
Asia told a different story. Japan's tertiary activity index plunged −4.3% m/m and August industrial production was −1.5%-a services shock that points to soft domestic demand.

Capital flows flipped back into JGBs and stayed strong into equities. Korea's unemployment dipped to 2.5% and export/import prices turned positive year on year, while Singapore's non-oil exports snapped back (+13.0% m/m; +6.9% y/y), widening its trade surplus.
Major Emerging Markets and Canada
Brazil's activity proxy (IBC-Br) rose 0.4% m/m, hinting at steadier Q3 growth; Canada's housing starts surprised at 279k.

The story behind the story: Fuel markets are tight downstream, Europe is easing gently via lower funding costs, and Japan's demand wobble could keep its bond yields-and global term premia-in play.

The next turns hinge on U.S. inflation and spending anecdotes, euro-area hard prints, and whether Asia's trade rebound sticks into Q4.

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