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Hard data suggests tariff-driven inflation and recession fears may be overblown
Hard data suggests tariff-driven inflation and recession fears may be overblown

Axios

time15-05-2025

  • Business
  • Axios

Hard data suggests tariff-driven inflation and recession fears may be overblown

With major indicators from April — the month of peak tariff uncertainty — now in, none show the kinds of recessionary or inflationary conditions implied by business and consumer surveys. Why it matters: Warnings and anecdotes are taking on greater importance as signs of how tariffs are working their way through the economy. The big picture: New data out Thursday showed steady retail sales and a surprising drop in wholesale prices in April. So far, so good. But also Thursday morning, the country's largest retailer warned that it will not be able to absorb tariff-related price increases — even considering the trade war pullback announced earlier this week. Walmart, known for its low prices, will pass some of those costs onto the consumer. If Walmart can't hold the line, it's hard to see how other retailers might be able to. What they're saying:"We're wired for everyday low prices, but the magnitude of these increases is more than any retailer can absorb," Walmart CFO John David Rainey told CNBC on Thursday. "It's more than any supplier can absorb. And so I'm concerned that consumer is going to start seeing higher prices. You'll begin to see that, likely towards the tail end of this month, and then certainly much more in June." By the numbers: Retail sales rose by 0.1% in April, after a massive spending surge that was even stronger than initially reported. The control group, used to calculate personal consumption expenditures in GDP, fell by 0.2%. Retail sales rose by 1.7% in March, revised up by 0.2 percentage point. It was the biggest gain in two years as consumers rushed to purchase autos and other goods before tariff-related price increases. The result was a pullback in most goods categories this month. Even so, there is some evidence that spending on services kept pace. Spending at restaurants and bars, among the few service-sector categories in the retail sales report, rose by 1.2% in April. Between the lines: The Producer Price Index, a gauge of wholesale prices, showed little sign of tariff-related price pressures that businesses have warned about. PPI fell by 0.5% in April after a flat reading in March, rounding out an upbeat inflation snapshot after the index's consumer counterpart released Tuesday. Goods prices were flat last month after falling almost a full percentage point in March. Services prices fell by 0.7%, the biggest drop since the index began in 2009. The bottom line:"There is little evidence, so far, that tariffs are inflationary and instead profit margins are being squeezed. But as Walmart suggested Thursday morning, that is a situation that may not last long," ING chief international economist James Knightley wrote in a note.

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty
Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

Economic Times

time08-05-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Factory sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed — which may take time. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads More signs emerged in a wave of reports this week that global manufacturing is buckling from President Donald Trump 's trade war Purchasing manager indexes across Asia, along with revised numbers in Europe on Friday, showed new or persisting contractions in factory activity in reports capped a flurry of worrying signals: Few economies are avoiding the concussion of tariffs and paralyzing uncertainty that's engulfed the world economy one month after the US president announced widespread taxes on American earlier in the week revealed damage in the two main combatants, whose tariffs have effectively shut off incentives for trade between nations that account for more than 40% of global GDP. A report Thursday showed US manufacturing activity shrank by the most in five months, a day after data revealed Chinese factories slipped into the deepest contraction since December sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed — which may take time, said James Knightley, chief international economist at ING.'The on-off-on-off nature of the tariffs is creating huge uncertainty and that is leading to businesses sitting on their hands,' Knightley said. 'They won't make big decisions until they have some confidence that there won't be another immediate change in the economic environment.'Before this trickle of initial indicators of a downturn began to surface, alarm at the world's prospects was already on show in Washington as finance chiefs gathered for the International Monetary Fund's meetings last month. After a cut in the growth outlook, the lender's chief, Kristalina Georgieva, warned that the chances of a global recession will rise if uncertainty the evidence is crystallizing of a synchronized hit that the world economy may struggle to shake off — even if the rewiring of international commerce sought by the White House does succeed through bilateral deals that remove trade barriers and suspend the imposition of higher Asian reports on Friday were stark. Indexes for the region's factory giants, including South Korea and Taiwan, slipped sharply amid falling orders and production cutbacks, according to S&P Global. In Southeast Asia, activity shrank in Thailand, Malaysia and the overall gloom, India was an outlier with expansion in glimmer of optimism in the near term appeared in the euro area, where the S&P Global manufacturing index reached a 32-month high. But it remained in contraction territory, with only the prospect of a spending binge to rearm the region's military likely to buoy the situation.'Industrial activity remains highly exposed to US tariff policy,' Hamburg Commercial Bank Chief Economist Cyrus de la Rubia said in a commentary. 'Manufacturers were clearly able to expand their profit margins in April, as purchasing prices fell while selling prices rose at their fastest pace in two years.'He added, though, that any improvements might be short-lived given the trade diversion that tariffs are causing. 'This is unlikely to continue as US tariff policy is likely to see Chinese goods being offered more widely in the EU, intensifying competition,' de la Rubia Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies International, warned that the PMI numbers so far are just the start — and that the impact may linger despite any trade deals Trump concludes.'It could be another few weeks before we really see the hit,' he said. 'Data will weaken even if we get deals with the majority of partners at the end of the 90 days, because there has been a lot of uncertainty, people will have pulled back, supply chains have got broken.'Figures out Friday showed the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing index of future output declined in April to the lowest level since October goods producers in emerging markets also took a South Africa, manufacturers turned more gloomy, blaming uncertainty fanned by global tariffs and domestic political strains. Absa Group Ltd.'s PMI purchasing managers' index, compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research, fell to 44.7 in April — its sixth consecutive month in the contraction manufacturing sector neared stagnation in April, with the PMI falling to 50.3, the weakest since December 2023.'Business confidence regarding output prospects dropped to the lowest level in five years amid concerns about US tariff policy and domestic economic conditions,' Alberto Ramos, chief Latin America economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., wrote in a Mexico, the decline was even more pronounced. Latin America's second-largest economy saw its PMI plunge to 44.8 in April from 46.5 in March, marking its 10th consecutive month of contraction and the lowest reading since February Seroka, executive director with the Port of Los Angeles, said he sees weeks or months of disruptions for American retailers and factories alike, given the length of time it takes companies to reroute their supply chains to avoid the US's 145% tariffs on most Chinese goods.'Manufacturing floor space capacity is at a premium, and you don't necessarily just say, 'OK, shut off China today. I'm going to Cambodia tomorrow,'' Seroka said in an interview published Friday by Bloomberg Opinion. 'It doesn't work that way.'

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty
Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

Time of India

time05-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

More signs emerged in a wave of reports this week that global manufacturing is buckling from President Donald Trump 's trade war . Purchasing manager indexes across Asia, along with revised numbers in Europe on Friday, showed new or persisting contractions in factory activity in April. The reports capped a flurry of worrying signals: Few economies are avoiding the concussion of tariffs and paralyzing uncertainty that's engulfed the world economy one month after the US president announced widespread taxes on American imports. Releases earlier in the week revealed damage in the two main combatants, whose tariffs have effectively shut off incentives for trade between nations that account for more than 40 per cent of global GDP. A report Thursday showed US manufacturing activity shrank by the most in five months, a day after data revealed Chinese factories slipped into the deepest contraction since December 2023. Factory sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed — which may take time, said James Knightley, chief international economist at ING. 'The on-off-on-off nature of the tariffs is creating huge uncertainty and that is leading to businesses sitting on their hands,' Knightley said. 'They won't make big decisions until they have some confidence that there won't be another immediate change in the economic environment.' Before this trickle of initial indicators of a downturn began to surface, alarm at the world's prospects was already on show in Washington as finance chiefs gathered for the International Monetary Fund's meetings last month. After a cut in the growth outlook, the lender's chief, Kristalina Georgieva, warned that the chances of a global recession will rise if uncertainty persists. Now, the evidence is crystallizing of a synchronised hit that the world economy may struggle to shake off — even if the rewiring of international commerce sought by the White House does succeed through bilateral deals that remove trade barriers and suspend the imposition of higher levies. The Asian reports on Friday were stark. Indexes for the region's factory giants, including South Korea and Taiwan, slipped sharply amid falling orders and production cutbacks, according to S&P Global. In Southeast Asia, activity shrank in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Amid the overall gloom, India was an outlier with expansion in activity. Another glimmer of optimism in the near term appeared in the euro area, where the S&P Global manufacturing index reached a 32-month high. But it remained in contraction territory, with only the prospect of a spending binge to rearm the region's military likely to buoy the situation. 'Industrial activity remains highly exposed to US tariff policy,' Hamburg Commercial Bank Chief Economist Cyrus de la Rubia said in a commentary. 'Manufacturers were clearly able to expand their profit margins in April, as purchasing prices fell while selling prices rose at their fastest pace in two years.' He added, though, that any improvements might be short-lived given the trade diversion that tariffs are causing. 'This is unlikely to continue as US tariff policy is likely to see Chinese goods being offered more widely in the EU, intensifying competition,' de la Rubia said. Mohit Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies International, warned that the PMI numbers so far are just the start — and that the impact may linger despite any trade deals Trump concludes. 'It could be another few weeks before we really see the hit,' he said. 'Data will weaken even if we get deals with the majority of partners at the end of the 90 days, because there has been a lot of uncertainty, people will have pulled back, supply chains have got broken.' Figures out Friday showed the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing index of future output declined in April to the lowest level since October 2022. Meanwhile, goods producers in emerging markets also took a hit. In South Africa, manufacturers turned more gloomy, blaming uncertainty fanned by global tariffs and domestic political strains. Absa Group Ltd.'s PMI purchasing managers' index, compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research, fell to 44.7 in April — its sixth consecutive month in the contraction zone. Brazil's manufacturing sector neared stagnation in April, with the PMI falling to 50.3, the weakest since December 2023. 'Business confidence regarding output prospects dropped to the lowest level in five years amid concerns about US tariff policy and domestic economic conditions,' Alberto Ramos, chief Latin America economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., wrote in a report. In Mexico, the decline was even more pronounced. Latin America's second-largest economy saw its PMI plunge to 44.8 in April from 46.5 in March, marking its 10th consecutive month of contraction and the lowest reading since February 2021. Gene Seroka, executive director with the Port of Los Angeles, said he sees weeks or months of disruptions for American retailers and factories alike, given the length of time it takes companies to reroute their supply chains to avoid the US's 145 per cent tariffs on most Chinese goods. 'Manufacturing floor space capacity is at a premium, and you don't necessarily just say, 'OK, shut off China today. I'm going to Cambodia tomorrow,'' Seroka said in an interview published Friday by Bloomberg Opinion. 'It doesn't work that way.'

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty
Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

Time of India

time05-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs, uncertainty

Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Factory sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed — which may take time. Popular in Rise Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads More signs emerged in a wave of reports this week that global manufacturing is buckling from President Donald Trump 's trade war Purchasing manager indexes across Asia, along with revised numbers in Europe on Friday, showed new or persisting contractions in factory activity in reports capped a flurry of worrying signals: Few economies are avoiding the concussion of tariffs and paralyzing uncertainty that's engulfed the world economy one month after the US president announced widespread taxes on American earlier in the week revealed damage in the two main combatants, whose tariffs have effectively shut off incentives for trade between nations that account for more than 40% of global GDP. A report Thursday showed US manufacturing activity shrank by the most in five months, a day after data revealed Chinese factories slipped into the deepest contraction since December sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed — which may take time, said James Knightley, chief international economist at ING.'The on-off-on-off nature of the tariffs is creating huge uncertainty and that is leading to businesses sitting on their hands,' Knightley said. 'They won't make big decisions until they have some confidence that there won't be another immediate change in the economic environment.'Before this trickle of initial indicators of a downturn began to surface, alarm at the world's prospects was already on show in Washington as finance chiefs gathered for the International Monetary Fund's meetings last month. After a cut in the growth outlook, the lender's chief, Kristalina Georgieva, warned that the chances of a global recession will rise if uncertainty the evidence is crystallizing of a synchronized hit that the world economy may struggle to shake off — even if the rewiring of international commerce sought by the White House does succeed through bilateral deals that remove trade barriers and suspend the imposition of higher Asian reports on Friday were stark. Indexes for the region's factory giants, including South Korea and Taiwan, slipped sharply amid falling orders and production cutbacks, according to S&P Global. In Southeast Asia, activity shrank in Thailand, Malaysia and the overall gloom, India was an outlier with expansion in glimmer of optimism in the near term appeared in the euro area, where the S&P Global manufacturing index reached a 32-month high. But it remained in contraction territory, with only the prospect of a spending binge to rearm the region's military likely to buoy the situation.'Industrial activity remains highly exposed to US tariff policy,' Hamburg Commercial Bank Chief Economist Cyrus de la Rubia said in a commentary. 'Manufacturers were clearly able to expand their profit margins in April, as purchasing prices fell while selling prices rose at their fastest pace in two years.'He added, though, that any improvements might be short-lived given the trade diversion that tariffs are causing. 'This is unlikely to continue as US tariff policy is likely to see Chinese goods being offered more widely in the EU, intensifying competition,' de la Rubia Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies International, warned that the PMI numbers so far are just the start — and that the impact may linger despite any trade deals Trump concludes.'It could be another few weeks before we really see the hit,' he said. 'Data will weaken even if we get deals with the majority of partners at the end of the 90 days, because there has been a lot of uncertainty, people will have pulled back, supply chains have got broken.'Figures out Friday showed the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing index of future output declined in April to the lowest level since October goods producers in emerging markets also took a South Africa, manufacturers turned more gloomy, blaming uncertainty fanned by global tariffs and domestic political strains. Absa Group Ltd.'s PMI purchasing managers' index, compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research, fell to 44.7 in April — its sixth consecutive month in the contraction manufacturing sector neared stagnation in April, with the PMI falling to 50.3, the weakest since December 2023.'Business confidence regarding output prospects dropped to the lowest level in five years amid concerns about US tariff policy and domestic economic conditions,' Alberto Ramos, chief Latin America economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., wrote in a Mexico, the decline was even more pronounced. Latin America's second-largest economy saw its PMI plunge to 44.8 in April from 46.5 in March, marking its 10th consecutive month of contraction and the lowest reading since February Seroka, executive director with the Port of Los Angeles, said he sees weeks or months of disruptions for American retailers and factories alike, given the length of time it takes companies to reroute their supply chains to avoid the US's 145% tariffs on most Chinese goods.'Manufacturing floor space capacity is at a premium, and you don't necessarily just say, 'OK, shut off China today. I'm going to Cambodia tomorrow,'' Seroka said in an interview published Friday by Bloomberg Opinion. 'It doesn't work that way.'

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs and uncertainty
Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs and uncertainty

Japan Times

time05-05-2025

  • Business
  • Japan Times

Global factories struggle to overcome Trump tariffs and uncertainty

More signs emerged in a wave of reports this week that global manufacturing is buckling from President Donald Trump's trade war. Purchasing manager indexes across Asia, along with revised numbers in Europe on Friday, showed new or persisting contractions in factory activity in April. The reports capped a flurry of worrying signals: Few economies are avoiding the concussion of tariffs and paralyzing uncertainty that's engulfed the world economy one month after the U.S. president announced widespread taxes on American imports. Releases earlier in the week revealed damage in the two main combatants, whose tariffs have effectively shut off incentives for trade between nations that account for more than 40% of global gross domestic product. A report Thursday showed U.S. manufacturing activity shrank by the most in five months, a day after data revealed Chinese factories slipped into the deepest contraction since December 2023. Factory sentiment is unlikely to turn around until there is clarity on where tariffs are headed, which may take time, said James Knightley, chief international economist at ING. "The on-off-on-off nature of the tariffs is creating huge uncertainty and that is leading to businesses sitting on their hands,' Knightley said. "They won't make big decisions until they have some confidence that there won't be another immediate change in the economic environment.' Before this trickle of initial indicators of a downturn began to surface, alarm at the world's prospects was already on show in Washington as finance chiefs gathered for the International Monetary Fund's meetings last month. After a cut in the growth outlook, the lender's chief, Kristalina Georgieva, warned that the chances of a global recession will rise if uncertainty persists. Now, the evidence is crystallizing of a synchronized hit that the world economy may struggle to shake off — even if the rewiring of international commerce sought by the White House does succeed through bilateral deals that remove trade barriers and suspend the imposition of higher levies. The Asian reports on Friday were stark. Indexes for the region's factory giants, including South Korea and Taiwan, slipped sharply amid falling orders and production cutbacks, according to S&P Global. In Southeast Asia, activity shrank in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Workers make restaurant appliances and cookware at a small factory in Guangzhou, China, on April 9. | Qilai Shen / The New York Times Amid the overall gloom, India was an outlier with expansion in activity. Another glimmer of optimism in the near term appeared in the euro area, where the S&P Global manufacturing index reached a 32-month high. But it remained in contraction territory, with only the prospect of a spending binge to rearm the region's military likely to buoy the situation. "Industrial activity remains highly exposed to U.S. tariff policy,' Hamburg Commercial Bank Chief Economist Cyrus de la Rubia said in a commentary. "Manufacturers were clearly able to expand their profit margins in April, as purchasing prices fell while selling prices rose at their fastest pace in two years.' He added, though, that any improvements might be short-lived given the trade diversion that tariffs are causing. "This is unlikely to continue as U.S. tariff policy is likely to see Chinese goods being offered more widely in the EU, intensifying competition,' de la Rubia said. Mohit Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies International, warned that the PMI numbers so far are just the start — and that the impact may linger despite any trade deals Trump concludes. "It could be another few weeks before we really see the hit,' he said. "Data will weaken even if we get deals with the majority of partners at the end of the 90 days, because there has been a lot of uncertainty, people will have pulled back, supply chains have got broken.' Figures out Friday showed the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing index of future output declined in April to the lowest level since October 2022. Meanwhile, goods producers in emerging markets also took a hit. In South Africa, manufacturers turned more gloomy, blaming uncertainty fanned by global tariffs and domestic political strains. Absa Group's purchasing managers' index, compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research, fell to 44.7 in April — its sixth consecutive month in the contraction zone. Brazil's manufacturing sector neared stagnation in April, with the PMI falling to 50.3, the weakest since December 2023. "Business confidence regarding output prospects dropped to the lowest level in five years amid concerns about U.S. tariff policy and domestic economic conditions,' Alberto Ramos, chief Latin America economist at Goldman Sachs Group, wrote in a report. In Mexico, the decline was even more pronounced. Latin America's second-largest economy saw its PMI plunge to 44.8 in April from 46.5 in March, marking its 10th consecutive month of contraction and the lowest reading since February 2021. Gene Seroka, executive director with the Port of Los Angeles, said he sees weeks or months of disruptions for American retailers and factories alike, given the length of time it takes companies to reroute their supply chains to avoid the U.S.' 145% tariffs on most Chinese goods. "Manufacturing floor space capacity is at a premium, and you don't necessarily just say, 'OK, shut off China today. I'm going to Cambodia tomorrow,'' Seroka said in an interview published Friday by Bloomberg Opinion. "It doesn't work that way.'

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