Chart of the week
In Europe, IHS Markit's flash PMIs for November were in line with the previous two months by indicating that activity in the bloc has essentially stalled as the composite index softened slightly to a 50.3 reading. Weakness persists in manufacturing where the sector remains mired in its deepest downturn in 6 years, though November's reading lifted to a 3-month high of 46.6 in a sign that activity is beginning to stabilise. While the services sector has remained resilient to this weakness throughout 2019, recent indications are that spillover impacts are in train as activity softened to its lowest level since the start of the year at a reading of 51.5. Germany narrowly avoided falling into a technical recession in Q3, though the largest economy in the bloc remains under the strain of trade tensions and external weakness with its composite PMI remaining in contraction at 49.2 in November.
Also this week, the Account of the European Central Bank's policy meeting in late October was published. At its September meeting, the Governing Council delivered a comprehensive package of stimulus measures to revive an ailing inflation outlook prompted by an ongoing slowdown in the euro area economy. Thus, October's meeting was very much focused around taking a "wait and see" stance that will allow the Governing Council time to assess how the economy responds to this new stimulus. In the lead up to September's meeting, several members of the Governing Council had been in public opposition to various elements of the stimulus package, most notably the reintroduction of quantitative easing. At what was the former ECB President Mario Draghi's final meeting, the Account outlined that "a strong call was made for unity of the Governing Council", noting that while robust discussions were appropriate and necessary, "it was regarded as important to form a consensus" as it would enhance its commitment to its inflation-targeting regime. This is the task now in front of the new President Christine Lagarde, who in her first major speech in the role called on fiscal authorities to work in tandem with the ECB's accommodative monetary policy stance to drive the euro area's long-term growth potential.
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The domestic perspective was informed this week by the minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia's Board meeting held earlier this month. As was widely expected, the Board elected to hold the cash rate at 0.75% at that meeting on the basis that it wanted to "wait and assess" the impact of the three rate cuts it had already delivered in 2019 in June, July and October. Overall, the Board's assessment is that this easing is bolstering employment and income growth and is thus assisting with gradually returning inflation to target, while it has also noted an improvement in conditions in the established housing market and the "positive spillovers" this will generate for the broader economy. Less certain is what the extent of those spillovers is likely to be and how earlier rate cuts and tax relief will work their way through to household spending. Adding weight to the decision to remain on hold, the Board recognised that with interest rates at a record low level there was a negative confidence impact on savers, while it also discussed the thesis that further rate cuts "could have a different effect on confidence than in the past, when rates were at higher levels". Notwithstanding, the Board remains prepared to ease further and is closely monitoring developments from offshore as well as the state of the domestic labour market. In looking ahead, the Board anticipates that output growth will lift to trend (2.75%) next year, before firming to around a 3.0% pace in 2021, based on stimulus from low interest rates, tax cuts, rising house prices, a turnaround in mining investment and ongoing infrastructure spending. Regarding infrastructure, this week PM Morrison announced that $3.8bn of projects will be brought forward over the next 4 years, with the impact to be a $1.8bn boost in spending between now and the end of the next financial year.