global
Unintended consequences of saving the world from the financial crisis
Neil Dwane (Allianz) | The response of central banks to the financial crisis 10 years ago may have saved the world from a devastating depression, but it also created a host of unforeseen effects – from more indebtedness to more economic inequality. Looking back at what we got right – and what went wrong – what lessons can we take away for the future?
What If Oil Goes To $100?
Brent oil prices are up more than 30% this year and have reached levels last seen in 2014. BoAML’s team on Commodities have revised up their forecasts; they now expect Brent to peak at $95/bbl by the end of 2Q 2019. They also consider the impact on global growth of an even larger and more sustained oil spike. Specifically discuss the factors that could drive oil prices to $100/bbl, and hash out the winners and losers.
European Share Buybacks In Perspective: €25 Bn/year?
European buybacks seem to be increasing by approximately 25 billion euros to a universe of 420 shares (excluding the banks) with a combined market capitalisation of 8 billion euros.
The word of the IMF: a more unified euro area
The IMF is forecasting global growth of over 3.9% in 2018. For the Eurozone, the forecast is for growth of 2.2%. The fifth year of economic expansion, confirming sustained and diversified growth. And the Washington-based organisation is calling for greater integration in the euro area.
Top Target of 2863 for the S&P 500 early in 2018, with the Nasdaq reaching 8000
In a BofAML released today and entitled A Year Ahead Forecast So Bullish, It’s Bearish, analysts draw three main conclusions: S&P 500 expected to climb to 2800 next year, despite sharp mid-year correction; inflation could be a global game-changer for stock and credit markets, and global economic growth accelerates,while the U.S. GDP capped by productivity and wages
Eurozone Inflation: With Just A Very Little Help From My Friends
Yes, inflation is a global phenomenon, and inflation moving higher elsewhere will help Euro area inflation. According to BoAML, while the global backdrop will be helping, it will not move the needle enough to sustain inflation beyond the mid-year hump. Analysts think that a gradual improvement in the global output gap will generate a cumulative increase of 5bps in Euro area core inflation.
Something Is Changing
J.L. M. Campuzano (Spanish Banking Association) | It’s still early days yet to affirm that the uptick in medium and long-term interest rates really reflects a change in trend. But it’s true that the central banks in the main developed countries are sending ever more clear signals about the limits of continuing to increase expansionary monetary policy.
Slowing OECD countries demand may drag on global oil markets
Oil demand in both Emerging Markets (EMs) and Developed Markets (DMs) has risen strongly since 2014, but now the oil market will have to rely on EM consumption, according to a BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research report.
Oil Price and Inflation – Rupture
Natixis AM | Currently, the most important graph is the price of oil. Last week, the oil price was was above its level of August 2015. The oil price has started to fall at mid-2014. Since this moment, the oil price was always below the level it had one year before. This has changed last week. It’s the first time since 2014 that we see such a crossing.