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Global Economy Briefing: December 9, 2025
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A goods-and-labor day pointed to softer prices with steady demand. Europe's surplus widened as imports fell. U.S. job openings rose.
Mexico's inflation re-accelerated. China's deflation pulse lingered in producer prices. Oil drew again, easing headline risks.
United States
Small-business optimism improved to 99.0. JOLTS openings rose to 7.67 million. That is still tight. Redbook slowed to 5.7% y/y, showing cooler holiday spend. API reported a 4.8 million-barrel crude draw.
A 10-year auction cleared at 4.175%. Takeaway: labor demand remains firm, but consumption is normalizing. Lower inventories cap near-term energy inflation.
Europe and UK
Germany's exports were flat (+0.1% m/m) while imports fell (−1.2%). The surplus widened to €16.9 billion. Spanish 3-month bills priced at 1.974%, slightly higher funding.
Norway's PPI was −8.1% y/y, signaling weak upstream pricing.
Read: Europe supports disinflation via cheaper imported inputs and lower energy pass-through. A larger German surplus also nudges the euro's floor higher.
Latin America
Mexico's CPI rose to 3.80% y/y. Core ticked to 4.43% y/y; monthly prints were firm. PPI eased to 2.4% y/y with a 0.4% m/m rise.
Signal: Banxico must stay cautious. Any easing will be shallow and data-dependent.
Asia-Pacific
Japan's machine tool orders rose 14.2% y/y but decelerated. The Reuters Tankan fell to 10. PPI stayed at 2.7% y/y.
Governor Ueda spoke as markets priced a slow exit path. Korea's unemployment edged up to 2.7%.
New Zealand saw stronger net migration. China's CPI was 0.7% y/y but −0.1% m/m. PPI fell 2.2% y/y.
Takeaway: Japan's corporate mood cooled, but pricing is contained. China remains disinflationary on the goods side, supporting global import prices.
Energy and commodities
API's draw supports crude near term. WASDE and the EIA outlook were due later, but positioning is already leaning to soft-commodity strength. Watch feed and freight costs into Q1.
What it means
Europe's wider surplus and China's negative PPI work together. They push traded-goods inflation lower worldwide.
A firmer U.S. labor market offsets that with steady demand, but not enough to reignite goods inflation.
For portfolios: favor quality duration and service-heavy names. Add selectively to European exporters that benefit from cheaper inputs and a stable euro. Keep Mexico in“carry with caution” until core cools again.
In Asia, prefer Japan's domestically focused firms and China importers over heavy industry, while China's disinflation aids global margins.
Mexico's inflation re-accelerated. China's deflation pulse lingered in producer prices. Oil drew again, easing headline risks.
United States
Small-business optimism improved to 99.0. JOLTS openings rose to 7.67 million. That is still tight. Redbook slowed to 5.7% y/y, showing cooler holiday spend. API reported a 4.8 million-barrel crude draw.
A 10-year auction cleared at 4.175%. Takeaway: labor demand remains firm, but consumption is normalizing. Lower inventories cap near-term energy inflation.
Europe and UK
Germany's exports were flat (+0.1% m/m) while imports fell (−1.2%). The surplus widened to €16.9 billion. Spanish 3-month bills priced at 1.974%, slightly higher funding.
Norway's PPI was −8.1% y/y, signaling weak upstream pricing.
Read: Europe supports disinflation via cheaper imported inputs and lower energy pass-through. A larger German surplus also nudges the euro's floor higher.
Latin America
Mexico's CPI rose to 3.80% y/y. Core ticked to 4.43% y/y; monthly prints were firm. PPI eased to 2.4% y/y with a 0.4% m/m rise.
Signal: Banxico must stay cautious. Any easing will be shallow and data-dependent.
Asia-Pacific
Japan's machine tool orders rose 14.2% y/y but decelerated. The Reuters Tankan fell to 10. PPI stayed at 2.7% y/y.
Governor Ueda spoke as markets priced a slow exit path. Korea's unemployment edged up to 2.7%.
New Zealand saw stronger net migration. China's CPI was 0.7% y/y but −0.1% m/m. PPI fell 2.2% y/y.
Takeaway: Japan's corporate mood cooled, but pricing is contained. China remains disinflationary on the goods side, supporting global import prices.
Energy and commodities
API's draw supports crude near term. WASDE and the EIA outlook were due later, but positioning is already leaning to soft-commodity strength. Watch feed and freight costs into Q1.
What it means
Europe's wider surplus and China's negative PPI work together. They push traded-goods inflation lower worldwide.
A firmer U.S. labor market offsets that with steady demand, but not enough to reignite goods inflation.
For portfolios: favor quality duration and service-heavy names. Add selectively to European exporters that benefit from cheaper inputs and a stable euro. Keep Mexico in“carry with caution” until core cools again.
In Asia, prefer Japan's domestically focused firms and China importers over heavy industry, while China's disinflation aids global margins.
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