Nice start to the year. Pity about the rest of it

By Reuters/Jeremy Gaunt   February 6, 2017 | 05:46 am PT
Nice start to the year. Pity about the rest of it
A worker walks next to an electronic stock board at the Indonesia Stock Exchange in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo by Reuters/Beawiharta/File Photo
There are too many uncertainties ahead to know whether it will continue or crumble, economists say.

The world economy has begun the year in fine form. America is cruising along, China is growing faster than expected, Britain is muffling the Brexit downdraft. Even the usually lagging euro zone is perky.

Pity about what lies ahead.

Almost every major economy's data releases these days seem to follow a similar pattern.

First, they are generally positive - either better than previously or only a little weaker. Then, policymakers and economists come out and say there are too many uncertainties ahead to know whether it will continue or crumble.

"Geopolitical risks are mounting and increasingly catching market attention in such fashion as to risk overshadowing most other developments," Canada's Scotiabank told its clients.

The risks are primarily political. How will U.S. President Donald Trump's "America First" protectionist talk translate into policy? Will Brexit finally come back to bite Britain by cutting off commercial growth and breeding inflation?

For the euro zone, meanwhile, the risks are existential. Elections in France, Italy, Germany and the Netherlands could result in anti-euro political parties gaining significant ground or even taking office. And Greece's hold on its place in the currency union remains flimsy.

In the past week the extra money investors demand to buy French bonds rather than German ones jumped - much of it because of a comment to Reuters by an official of the far-right National Front that it would put leaving the euro at the heart of its economic platform.

Polls suggest National Front candidate Marine Le Pen will not win the presidency - but after the Trump and Brexit surprises last year nothing can be ruled out.

Other risks are more Keynesian, revolving around whether years of stimulus from central banks in the form of asset-buying and negligible interest rates are finally producing inflation, which in turn will stop consumers from buying, slowing economic growth.

Economics can be very much a game of whack-a-mole.

Up next

The coming week may well be dominated by China, which returns from a holiday with a large slate of data, including the services purchasing managers index - which implied steady if slightly slower growth - foreign reserves data and possibly trade figures.

China grew a faster-than-expected 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, boosted by higher government spending and record bank lending.

But the economy still faces headwinds from a cooling housing market and possible protectionist measures from the U.S.

The foreign exchange reserves, meanwhile, are on the verge of falling below $3 trillion, although the pace of declines could be slowed by capital controls and the dollar's retreat.

China is being cautious. It raised a number of policy rates on Friday against what Deutsche Bank described as a dilemma.

"Policy needs to be tightened for financial stability considerations, but (the central bank) wants to control the pace and magnitude so that ... the tightening does not trigger disruptive adjustments (bubble burst), and ... does not jeopardize the stabilizing growth outlook," it said.

In the euro zone, there will be German, French, Spanish and Italian industrial production data. All are expected to show growth.

Germany's volatile factory orders may be under particular scrutiny. They fell 2.5 percent month-on-month in November, a plunge from a 5 percent rise the month before.

Economists polled by Reuters expect a bounce back.

Meanwhile, a wish-you-were-a-fly-on-the wall moment occurs on Thursday when European Central Bank President Mario Draghi goes to Berlin for talks on the euro zone economy with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

For the United States, the weekly outlook is thin, with monthly trade figures a highlight with a little changed $45 billion deficit expected.

Any significant policy moves, however, are likely to be found on Twitter feed @realDonaldTrump.

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