U.S.: Remains likely to outperform
The
U.S. economic recovery lost momentum
in H1’2012, however with moderate employment gains in recent months and a pick-up
in the pace of consumer spending; I expect real GDP growth to increase to trend
thorough H2’2012, in spite of the events in the E.U. -- I remain of the view
that the transmission mechanism of the European crisis to the U.S. economy are relatively
limited. My view on the U.S. economy is further anchored on improving confidence
in both businesses and households across the U.S., as well as slower deleveraging,
which should allow the saving rates to ease. Housing demand has increased
noticeably in 2012, but the overhang of unsold homes and the tide of
foreclosures have scuttled a speedy revival in residential investment.
I
expect the medley of the aforementioned factors to spur growth in H2’2012,
driven by private-sector demand rather than by policy. In fact, I see fiscal consolidation
in the U.S. as a possible drag on growth with the risk of excessive fiscal
tightening in 2013 still to be addressed. Moreover, long-term fiscal
sustainability in the U.S. remains to be achieved, and a credible fiscal plan
is needed to ensure it. Given the still fragile
recovery, monetary policy should remain accommodative, but conditional upon other
developments. Given the foregoing, I do not expect a moderation in fiscal
policy to significantly offset the gains in private sector activity in H2’2012.
Furthermore, I have adopted a cautiously optimistic, view of the U.S. equity
markets in H2’2012, while being mindful of the risks.
Europe:
Outlook remains negative
Activity
in the E.U. stagnated in Q2’2012 after
contracting at the end of 2011 and Q1’2012. Unemployment has risen consistently
through H1’2012 and is set to rise further in H2’2012, owing to weak confidence
and difficult financial conditions related to the sovereign debt crisis.
Provided that policy actions are sufficient to improve confidence, activity
should begin to recover gradually in the H2’2012, notwithstanding fiscal
consolidation and private sector deleveraging across the region. However, I am not
optimistic that this view will materialize. Rather, I anticipate that E.U.
policymakers will muddle through H2’2012 with a series of half measures (the
result of a sustained failure to reach consensus) that will prove inadequate to
thoroughly resolve the region’s problem. Accordingly, I expect a divergence between
moderate growth in creditor countries (particularly Germany and France) and, weaker/delayed
recovery in countries with large debt overhang, even as the large margins of
spare capacity across the region moderate inflationary pressures. The main
risks to this outlook for the region in H2’2012 centre’s on a possible intensification
of the debt crisis and the economic effects of high public and private
indebtedness. Though recent decisions have significantly increased the capacity
of Europe’s firewall to address government funding problems, I remain of the
view that it remains insufficient and fraught with regulatory handicaps. With
these constraint in view, I expect monetary conditions to ease further in
H2’2012 – possibly in the form of a 25 bps cut to the ECB’s prime rate. With the
scope for monetary and fiscal stimulus limited, reforms to labor market
institutions, product market regulations and the tax system needed to sustain
growth and boost jobs, I retain the view that European financial markets are
likely to underperform their developed market pairs.
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