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Global Economy Briefing: December 8, 2025
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A clean two-message day: Europe's real-economy pulse firmed while dollar funding eased. Germany's factories advanced; euro investor mood improved; and U.S. bill yields fell.
Asia's liquidity buffers thickened. Brazil's autos slumped, a warning for Southern Cone supply chains.
United States
Inflation expectations were steady at 3.2%. Three- and six-month bills tailed lower (3.65% and 3.58%), easing dollar funding. The 3-year note edged up to 3.614%, so duration appetite remains selective.
Europe and UK
Germany's industrial production beat (1.8% m/m; 0.9% y/y). Sentix improved to −6.2, the best since July.
German and French bill auctions cleared at slightly higher yields, but demand held. Swiss consumer climate rose to −34. UK BRC retail grew just 1.2% y/y.
Read-through: Europe's goods side is stabilizing; the UK consumer stays fragile.
Latin America
Brazil's autos fell hard (output −11.6% m/m; sales −8.5% m/m). That hits parts makers in São Paulo and ripples into Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay logistics. It also softens regional demand for steel, plastics, and refinery by-products.
Asia-Pacific
Singapore's reserves rose to $400B. Japan's money growth quickened (M2 1.8% y/y), while the Economy Watchers gauge slipped to 48.7.
Australia's approvals dropped (−6.4% m/m), business confidence cooled, and the RBA held at 3.60%.
A 5-year JGB auction printed 1.435%, signaling a slow normalization path. Net: Asia's buffers are thick, but Australia's construction cycle is cooling.
Canada
The leading index rose 0.20% m/m. Signal: slow growth, not contraction.
What it means
Lower U.S. bill yields trim global dollar funding costs. That supports EM FX and lowers pass-through inflation risk into early 2026.
Germany's output beat nudges Europe's goods cycle off the floor and helps global capex sentiment.
Rising Asian reserves and Japanese money growth anchor regional liquidity, damping FX volatility.
Brazil's auto slump is the day's negative swing factor; expect softer Southern Cone manufacturing, weaker diesel demand, and narrower freight spreads.
Portfolio tilt: keep quality duration; add selectively to euro industrials and exporters; stay underweight UK discretionary; prefer ASEAN and Japan over Australia until approvals and business sentiment turn.
Asia's liquidity buffers thickened. Brazil's autos slumped, a warning for Southern Cone supply chains.
United States
Inflation expectations were steady at 3.2%. Three- and six-month bills tailed lower (3.65% and 3.58%), easing dollar funding. The 3-year note edged up to 3.614%, so duration appetite remains selective.
Europe and UK
Germany's industrial production beat (1.8% m/m; 0.9% y/y). Sentix improved to −6.2, the best since July.
German and French bill auctions cleared at slightly higher yields, but demand held. Swiss consumer climate rose to −34. UK BRC retail grew just 1.2% y/y.
Read-through: Europe's goods side is stabilizing; the UK consumer stays fragile.
Latin America
Brazil's autos fell hard (output −11.6% m/m; sales −8.5% m/m). That hits parts makers in São Paulo and ripples into Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay logistics. It also softens regional demand for steel, plastics, and refinery by-products.
Asia-Pacific
Singapore's reserves rose to $400B. Japan's money growth quickened (M2 1.8% y/y), while the Economy Watchers gauge slipped to 48.7.
Australia's approvals dropped (−6.4% m/m), business confidence cooled, and the RBA held at 3.60%.
A 5-year JGB auction printed 1.435%, signaling a slow normalization path. Net: Asia's buffers are thick, but Australia's construction cycle is cooling.
Canada
The leading index rose 0.20% m/m. Signal: slow growth, not contraction.
What it means
Lower U.S. bill yields trim global dollar funding costs. That supports EM FX and lowers pass-through inflation risk into early 2026.
Germany's output beat nudges Europe's goods cycle off the floor and helps global capex sentiment.
Rising Asian reserves and Japanese money growth anchor regional liquidity, damping FX volatility.
Brazil's auto slump is the day's negative swing factor; expect softer Southern Cone manufacturing, weaker diesel demand, and narrower freight spreads.
Portfolio tilt: keep quality duration; add selectively to euro industrials and exporters; stay underweight UK discretionary; prefer ASEAN and Japan over Australia until approvals and business sentiment turn.
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