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Here’s What Happened in World Economy’s Biggest Week of 2019

Published 2019-08-02, 12:36 a/m
© Reuters.  Here’s What Happened in World Economy’s Biggest Week of 2019

(Bloomberg) -- All eyes were on the Federal Reserve’s show in this blockbuster week, yet while he delivered the widely-anticipated cut to interest rates Chairman Jerome Powell still disappointed investors hoping he would signal more aggressive easing to come.

The first Fed cut since 2008 also did little to quell worries about lingering trade frictions -- which heated up Thursday with a new threat from the U.S. -- or to drown out a fresh round of weak data led by bad news out of Europe.

Check back later on Friday for U.S. nonfarm payrolls data, which probably will show that employers added 165,000 workers last month.

Here’s our weekly wrap of what’s going on in the world economy and click here for more insight from Bloomberg Economics.

Full-On Fed

The most highly anticipated Fed decision of the year yielded few surprises, yet markets didn’t quite get what they wanted and stocks dropped. Powell’s line on the reduction not being the start of a long series of cuts spooked investors -- even as he insisted that didn’t mean this necessarily is a one-cut deal, either. That sticking point is a further sign that Fed decisions will remain high-pressured for the markets at least through year’s end.

The Powell messages that were more well-received:

  • A focus on the fundamentals, with downside risks and the inflation shortfall leading the way and Powell assuring this wasn’t just about (politically charged) trade policy
  • Reassurance that there’s nothing posing a major near-term threat to the U.S. economy, monetary policy is working, and this cut had an insurance, risk management aspect to it
  • Acknowledgment that trade policy uncertainty is greater than was expected, the Fed will use all its tools aggressively as needed, and -- in a small surprise -- balance sheet shrinking will end in August, earlier than previously announced
  • Defense of the Fed’s independence, saying the Fed never takes political considerations into account but also that they won’t conduct policy to prove that independence
Nevertheless, President Donald Trump, of course, wasn’t pleased.

Read More:

  • Powell Suggests Fed Embarking on 1990s-Style Mini Easing Cycle
  • Chaotic Messaging Makes It Hard to Decode Trump’s Dollar Policy
  • Housing Crisis Deepens as Prices Soar Beyond Buyers’ Reach (1)
Now What

Now that the Fed has pulled the rate-cut trigger, further dovishness could be due globally. The Bank of Japan held policy Tuesday while signaling more willingness to add to easing, and elsewhere in Asia central bankers probably will be slower to follow the Fed on the way down than they were to follow it up.

Brazil’s wasted no time, adding a half-point cut into the mix Wednesday and pledging to do more for an ailing economy. Policy makers in the Gulf weren’t far behind, while the Fed wrong-footed the few remaining hawkish central banks.

Governments are still leaning hard on rate setters -- another ominous sign of waning firepower for the next global downturn, as Bloomberg Economics analysis shows. Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador told Bloomberg he’d like more interest-rate cuts and Russia’s economic minister issuing an unusual warning about central bank inaction.

Read More:

  • What Is Turkey’s Reasonable Real Rate as It Cuts? Take Your Pick
  • Worst Thai Drought in a Decade Adds Pressure for Policy-Rate Cut
  • Asset Bubbles to Zombie Companies: The Dark Side of Rate Cuts
Same Old

Trump rattled the financial markets anew Thursday, issuing a threat to install another round of tariffs on China for alleged inaction on U.S. soybean purchases and the flow of fentanyl into the U.S.

The series of tweets further killed the mood of U.S.-China talks this week, which met an anti-climactic end with a plan to regroup in early September. This round always had a rocky feel to it, despite a waterfront dinner and jazz nostalgia. Trump -- who had recently voiced support for President Xi Jinping in the latter’s struggle to contain Hong Kong protests -- broke his silence to call out China for a “rip off” and charging China and other self-declared developing countries with cheating via WTO preferences. Beijing, for its part, pledged ahead of the talks to “effectively deal with trade frictions” in the second half of the year.

Asia’s still feeling the pain acutely, the July PMIs showed. Factory gauges in China and Japan added more bad news, and the export-heavy small economies of Singapore and Hong Kong are seeing storm clouds ahead. The U.S. is no longer a happy exception to the gloom and doom on our Bloomberg Trade Tracker.

Japan’s removal of South Korea from a list of trusted export destinations can’t help matters.

Read More:

  • South Korea Exports Tumble Again in July as Trade Woes Drag On
  • Signs of End to Tech Slump Offer Hope to Asia’s Economies
  • Trump’s Bid to Dismantle Global Trading System Poised for a Win
Old World Problems

It was a rough week for Europe, with data roundly adding gloom to the outlook and prompting Bloomberg Economics to see big stimulus coming from the European Central Bank in September. Growth and inflation hit the brakes, confidence wilted. The continent’s growth engine, Germany, saw an unemployment uptick while Bloomberg analysts project July saw a deeper growth contraction there. France and Spain added disappointments. And sterling’s slump is unlikely to carry a silver lining for the economy this time.

Europe wasn’t entirely alone, with sluggish animal spirits in India and housing increasingly out of reach for many Americans.

Weekend Reading

  • Double the Women at Brazil’s Central Bank Still Means Just Two
  • The Dream of $15 Minimum Wage Gets a Reality Check From Inflation
  • China’s Gen Z, With Little Income, Gets Hooked on Easy Credit
  • India Is Only Major Asian Nation That’s Growing Its Export Share
  • Inequality Play Is Over, Says Analyst Who Coined ‘Plutonomy’
Chart of the Week

Measuring the Monetary Space for a New Round of Rate Cuts

(Updates with U.S. threat, other trade developments under ’Same Old’.)

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