Back

Canada: Unexpected narrowing in trade deficit – RBC

Josh Nye, senior economist at Royal Bank of Canada, points out that Canada's trade deficit unexpectedly narrowed in October as a strike in the US auto sector (which prompted temporary layoffs here in Canada) seemed to weigh just as much on imports as it did on exports.

Key Quotes

“Non-energy export volumes still managed to post a decent increase but are only displaying a faint pulse, down 0.3% from a year earlier.”

“Despite a slightly better than expected outcome in October, we continue to think trade will act as a drag on growth again in Q4. A challenging global backdrop has made 2019 a year to forget for exporters, but as the BoC noted yesterday, there is "nascent evidence" that global growth is stabilizing.”

“Perhaps more importantly, Canada's economy has continued to display resilience in other sectors, particularly services. In fact, services data released today (alongside the goods numbers for the first time) showed services exports were up more than 5% from a year earlier. It is that resilience, as well as concerns about household debt, that has the BoC sounding more reluctant to lower interest rates.”

Asia: Lacklustre credit growth despite policy easing – ANZ

ANZ analysts point out that the Centrals banks in six Asian economies — India, Indonesia, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines — have
อ่านเพิ่มเติม Previous

USD/INR sellers stop cheering RBI’s inaction with eyes on US jobs report

USD/INR takes the bids to 71.35 by the press time of the pre-European session on Friday.
อ่านเพิ่มเติม Next