Triada de Cripto, Dólar y Oro
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Last week was certainly an interesting one, with the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) deciding to start the new year with a gloomy prediction. Amazon, meanwhile, joined other tech giants in announcing massive job cuts as the tech-industry slump deepens. In macro news, German and French inflation slowed down more than expected in December (that will definitely be welcome news for the European Central Bank). Elon Musk’s troubles continue, with Tesla’s fourth-quarter deliveries coming up short of analysts’ estimates. And finally, the new year brought some much-needed good news for energy users: a warmer-than-expected start to winter across large parts of the world is sending natural gas prices significantly lower. Find out more in this week’s review.
A third of the global economy will be hit by recession this year, according to the IMF, with the institution warning that the world faces a tougher year in 2023 than the previous one. The main reasoning behind the dire forecast is that the three big economies – the US, EU, and China – are all slowing down at the same time.
Regarding China, the country’s annual growth is likely to be at or below global growth for the first time in 40 years, according to the IMF. That means China could end up dragging down worldwide economic activity this year rather than propelling it. Case in point: data published last Saturday showed that China’s abrupt reversal of its Covid Zero policy pushed economic activity in December to the slowest pace since February 2020, as the virus swept through major cities and prompted people to stay home and businesses to shut.
Regarding the EU, the IMF reckons half of the bloc will be in recession this year due to the ongoing war in Ukraine. Finally, the US is likely to escape the worst of the downturn thanks in part to its strong labor market. In the IMF chief’s own words: “the US may avoid a recession because its unemployment is so low. If that resilience holds in 2023, the US would help the world to get through a very difficult year”.
Economists don’t share the IMF’s optimism: they reckon the Fed will push interest rates above 5% by March 2023 in moves that’ll likely lead to a US and global recession. In fact, a survey of 40 economists conducted by Bloomberg back in October found that three-quarters of them expect the US to enter recession over the next two years due to the risk of the Fed over-tightening – i.e. the risk that the central bank will raise rates too much and cause unnecessary economic pain as opposed to not raising enough and failing to contain inflation.
Moving on, the eurozone’s two biggest economies – Germany and France – received some good macro news last week, with the rate of inflation in both countries slowing down more than expected in December. That will be welcome news for the European Central Bank, which last year raised interest rates at an unprecedented pace to tackle record levels of eurozone inflation.
Consumer prices in Germany were 9.6% higher in December than a year ago – the weakest increase since August and much lower than the 10.7% economists were expecting. The slowdown was partly because of measures by the government to shield consumers from high gas prices during the month, offering a temporary breather to the country’s cost-of-living crisis. But Germany’s central bank has cautioned against misinterpreting single data reports as a shift in trend, predicting consumer inflation will remain above 7% in 2023.
French inflation, meanwhile, unexpectedly slowed last month. Consumer prices in France rose 6.7% in December from a year ago after record increases of 7.1% in October and November. That came as a relief considering that economists were expecting inflation to accelerate to 7.3% in the final month of 2022, in part due to the government beginning to phase out fuel discounts.
Tesla announced at the start of last week that it handed 405,278 vehicles to customers last quarter, missing analyst estimates for 420,760 deliveries despite taking the unusual step of offering big incentives in its two biggest markets, China and the US. While the total was a quarterly record for Tesla, the firm opened two new assembly plants last year and still came up short on its goal to expand deliveries by 50% – the average annual growth rate the company has said it expects to achieve over multiple years.
Tesla’s quarterly delivery figures are widely seen as a barometer for EV demand generally, so its disappointing update could reinforce demand concerns that played a role in sending the EV-maker’s stock down 65% last year. Investors are worried that higher interest rates, an economic slowdown, and rising EV competition could crimp demand for Tesla’s models in 2023. Another data point fueling those demand concerns is that Tesla’s production outpaced deliveries for the third straight quarter: the company produced 439,701 vehicles in the fourth quarter, exceeding deliveries by 34,423 units.
In other news, Amazon announced last week that it’s laying off more than 18,000 employees – the biggest reduction in its history. The cuts, which represent about 1% of Amazon’s employees, will be concentrated in the firm’s corporate ranks, mostly Amazon’s retail division and human resources functions (e.g. recruiting). It joins other tech giants in making major cuts as the tech-industry slump deepens. Salesforce, for example, also announced job cuts last week with the plans to eliminate about 10% of its workforce. The latest moves come after the tech industry announced more than 80,000 job cuts last year, according to consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
The new year brought some much-needed good news for energy users. A warmer-than-expected start to winter across large parts of the world is easing fears of a natural gas crisis that had been predicted to trigger power outages and pressure energy bills. Forecasts at the start of last week pointed to temperatures above seasonal norms for most of Europe for two weeks, while China (the world’s biggest gas importer) and the US expect better weather through mid-January. Japan may also start to see a spike in temperatures around mid-January.
Natural gas prices around the world are plummeting on reduced fuel consumption and the weaker outlook, with US contracts tumbling in their first trading session of 2023. Last Monday also saw European gas prices briefly touch their lowest level since the outbreak of war in Ukraine. Gas storage across Europe is 84% full, far above the five-year seasonal norm of 70%, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe. Helping matters is the return of stronger winds across parts of the region. Germany, for example, produced a near-record amount of wind power last Wednesday.
The fourth-quarter earnings season officially kicks off in the US, with four major banks scheduled to announce their latest earnings. The economic calendar is quite light, but there are still some key releases happening this week, namely US CPI.
Descargo de responsabilidad general
Este contenido es solo para fines informativos y no constituye asesoramiento financiero ni una recomendación de compra o venta. Las inversiones conllevan riesgos, incluida la posible pérdida de capital. El rendimiento pasado no es indicativo de resultados futuros. Antes de tomar decisiones de inversión, considere sus objetivos financieros o consulte a un asesor financiero calificado.
No
Más o menos
Bueno
Triada de Cripto, Dólar y Oro
Un Barrido Rojo
Señal de venta espeluznante
Oro brilla a nuevos máximos
El BCE recorta de nuevo
Desaceleración de la Desinflación
Afluencia de la Semana Dorada
El Paquete Masivo de China
La Gran Reducción de Tasa de la Fed
El BCE recorta de nuevo
Los bancos se vuelven pesimistas sobre China
Lingote de Oro de un Millón de Dólares
Los bonos están de vuelta
Lunes Negro
Decisiones de Tasa Divergentes
Sigue siendo fuerte
Más pequeño es mejor
El nombre es Bond, Bono Verde
Victoria aplastante
La euforia por la IA se toma un descanso
Adiós Apple, Hola Nvidia
La Fed se mantiene firme
Una montaña rusa india
El nombre es Bond, Bono Convertible
Nvidia lo vuelve a hacer
Un pequeño alivio
De auge a caída
Más alto por más tiempo
Sigue siendo magnífico
Mitad y Desastre
Inflación persistente
Choc Shock
El Fin de una Era
Reino Unido Rebota
La meta de China
Adiós iCar, Hola iAI
Nvidia Supera las Expectativas
Alemania supera a Japón
Cabalgando al Dragón
China’s Falling Behind
Dragón Envejecido
La inflación de EE. UU. se acelera
Tesla Perdió su Corona
Resumen del Mercado 2023
El Último Samurái
Fed Insinúa Recortes de Tasa para 2024
El Mercado de Bonos: Licencia para Emocionar
Cyber Week Bonanza
El drama del cambio de liderazgo en OpenAI
La inflación se está enfriando en Estados Unidos y el Reino Unido
De vuelta a la deflación
Triple Aumento de las Tasas de Retención
La economía estadounidense sigue mostrando su fuerza
La inflación se niega a bajar
Los inversores se preparan para una caída
Un final a la vista
Receso de Aumento de Tasa
Fin de una era
Las principales ambiciones de China se están desvaneciendo
Las alcancías de los estadounidenses se están quedando vacías
Tratando de Romper la Espiral (Salarial-Precios)
China: Una Nación en Deflación
Tío Sam es degradado
Caminatas Gemelas
Dragón Estancado
La plata brilla con fuerza
Inflación del Reino Unido: Desafiando la Gravedad
La Fed Llama a un Tiempo Fuera
Un golpe doble
Dragón Encogido
Mantén la calma y sigue adelante
El Efecto IA de la Manía de la IA
SLOOS: Se acerca la hora de la verdad
El fin está cerca
OPEP Baja el Precio de la Bomba
¿Por qué el oro brilla?
No se puede parar, no se detendrá
Aumentar o no Aumentar
China: Un país que no cumple con las expectativas
¿Crisis Energética?
El nombre es Bond, Bond japonés
La guerra de la IA ha comenzado
Aumentos por doquier
Población en Declive
Toma tu caja y vete
Elon se despide a sí mismo…
Triple Whammy
Ocho Mil Millones y Contando
No hay pausa para Santa
La Lechuga Ganó
Giro en U
Los Bonos se Llaman: Vendiendo Bonos
Más Jumbo
La esperada fusión
¿Hemos Tocado Fondo?
Una pesadilla de dos dígitos
Enfriamiento
Secándose
Más fortaleza del dólar, más problemas
Despegue del BCE