SEB: Nordic Outlook: Monetary tailwind meets political headwind Global growth has bottomed out -deleveraging slows recovery
The needle of the world economic compass is pointing in the right direction. Our
forecast scenario from the autumn of 2012 remains in place. Global growth will
increase both in 2013 and 2014, but at a subdued pace and at divergent speeds in
different countries and regions. A number of positive forces are in motion:
global monetary policy is becoming more growth-focused; the recovery in the
United States and China is on increasingly firm ground; Japan has launched a new
economic stimulus programme; greater political flexibility permeates
governments' fiscal tightening efforts and the introduction of banking
regulations and standards; the imbalances in the euro zone are diminishing.
But it is too early to breathe a sigh of relief and lean back. Growth is being
effectively held back because households, governments and banks in the Western
world have not yet achieved their debt consolidation targets. There is still
heightened economic and political uncertainty in the US, Europe and China due to
American budget uncertainty, deep euro zone problems and China's change of
leadership. This destabilises the optimism of industrial firms, which may easily
be transformed into a self-amplifying downward spiral of postponed capital
spending and hiring decisions. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in the 34 countries
of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) will grow by
1.5 per cent in 2013 (up from 1.3 per cent in 2012) and 2.1 per cent in 2014.
Global resource utilisation will be low during this forecast period. Continued
high unemployment will push down the rate of pay increases. OECD inflation will
remain stable at 1-2 per cent, even though the balance sheets of central banks
will continue to grow during 2013.
The spotlight will fall on monetary policy and its targets, techniques and
independence. This is because of low growth expectations and high unemployment
in the OECD countries, while fiscal policy is constrained. A monetary policy
evolution or revolution is unfolding. This means, for example, that an inflation
targeting policy is being expanded into nominal GDP growth and nominal credit
growth targets and a "fiscalisation" of monetary policy, in which the decisions
of central banks move closer to governments and parliaments. The pattern that is
emerging, in public discourse and with the US and Japan as practical examples,
implies that central banks are being pressured to accept higher inflation and
increased inflation risks in order to achieve lower unemployment and more job
creation. In the short term, this is positive for global economic growth, but it
pushes inflation expectations and long-term yields upward, increases the need
for macroprudential supervisory tools and generates capital flows and
appreciation pressure for Nordic and Asian currencies, among others. Our
conclusion is that the US Federal Reserve will leave its key interest rate at
0-0.25 per cent during our forecast period, since US unemployment will end up at
6.8 per cent in 2014 - above the Fed's 6.5 per cent benchmark. The Bank of
England and the European Central Bank (ECB) will not touch their key rates
during 2013-2014 either.
The economic outlook in the US and China will steadily continue improving. This
will add stability, risk appetite and dynamism to the world economy despite
continued problems in Europe. In the US, the underlying growth trend will gain
strength. US households are now close to debt levels that are sustainable in the
long term. Meanwhile we expect home prices to climb by at least 10 per cent in
2013-2014. In addition, industrial firms have been under-investing for years.
There will be no major growth surge, however, due to a dose of fiscal tightening
totalling 1.2-1.5 per cent of GDP per year, and because of continued high
unemployment. American GDP will grow by 2.1 per cent this year and 2.7 per cent
in 2014. US federal budget policy is an obvious source of concern and growth
risk, but we expect that given his politically stronger position, President
Obama will reach agreements with Congress this spring. As a result, public
sector debt will peak at 115 per cent of GDP in 2015 and then decline very
slowly. The Fed will hike its key interest rate only after our forecast period,
in the spring of 2015, while its bond purchases (quantitative easing) will end
early in 2014. This exit policy will be end immediately if it leads to undesired
increases in long-term yields.
In China, government economic policy is expected to become clearer this spring
after the change of leadership, which will support higher capital spending and
consumption. What is happening in China is a historic economic, financial and
political experiment with an uncertain outcome. Social discontent, home price
and goods inflation, border disputes as well as questions about - and the impact
of - China's new growth model are significant risks to growth, but the
likelihood that they will materialise during our forecast period is small. We
expect China's GDP to grow by 8.1 per cent in 2013 and by 7.7 per cent in 2014.
This is above the political target of 7.5 per cent and well above the 6 per cent
GDP growth that is regarded as a critical level to enable the country to avoid
rising unemployment. The central bank will begin a cautious key interest rate
hiking cycle late in 2013 from a rate of 6.00. We expect the yuan to become
about 5 per cent stronger against the US dollar during 2013-2014.
The euro zone's acute crisis has faded but its problems are far from solved.
Euro zone countries have made both economic and political progress. Without the
presence of the ECB's crisis mitigation mechanisms, however, borrowing costs for
governments and banks would not have fallen and financial stress decreased.
Corrections are under way in euro zone competitiveness and imbalances, but
further structural reforms are necessary to create lasting current account
surpluses that will reduce large external debts and refinancing risks. We expect
the euro zone to show near-zero growth in 2013-2014, while unemployment will
rise to a new record level of 12.4 per cent. According to the OECD, the euro
zone's banking system is EUR 400 billion undercapitalised, which hampers credit
supply and economic growth.
Our euro zone scenario still contains large elements of political uncertainty.
European cooperation and crisis resolution capacity will be tested at both
national and supranational levels by social pressures and coming parliamentary
elections (for example in Italy and Germany in 2013 and at the EU level in
2014) and growing calls for referendums related to the emergence of a new
European political union. There is still a disturbingly high probability that at
least one country, for example Greece, will choose to withdraw from the euro
zone, although the immediate risk has diminished. As we have indicated earlier,
we believe that Spain will need an emergency loan to deal with that instability
that permeates the Spanish economy and banking system. During the next two
years, an escalating debate on the future of both the euro and the EU will add
uncertainty to economic policy, thus hampering growth. As a result of this, we
predict that the euro will lose value against the dollar, especially during
2014; the EUR/USD exchange rate in December 2014 will stand at 1.20.
Sweden's economic slowdown will persist in 2013-2014, but growth has already
bottomed out despite a surprisingly weak year-end 2012. We are thus sticking to
the forecast we presented last autumn. The recovery will occur with support both
from underlying capital spending and consumption potential and from the
government and the Riksbank (Sweden's central bank), which will take new steps
to stimulate the economy. The dose of government fiscal stimulus in 2014 will be
as large as in 2013 (about SEK 25 billion or 0.7 per cent of GDP), focusing
primarily on households for tactical political reasons: next year's
parliamentary elections at the EU and national levels. The net lending deficit
will be about 1.5 per cent of GDP in both forecast years, and central government
debt will climb by 3 percentage points to more than 36 per cent of GDP
(including the latest loan to the Riksbank). Yet these developments will pose no
threats to confidence that would raise Sweden's interest rate margins. Sweden's
zero inflation environment, the fiscal stimulus and this spring's new collective
agreements in the labour market - which are expected to result in total pay
increases of less than 3 per cent - will generate strong real purchasing power
for households, whose overall savings ratio will be above 10 per cent. Sweden's
GDP will grow by 1.2 per cent in 2013 (up from 0.8 per cent in 2012) and will
reach 2.5 per cent in 2014.
The Riksbank will cut its key interest rate to 0.75 per cent and then leave it
unchanged for the rest of our forecast period. There are a number of reasons for
this. Resource utilisation will remain low and unemployment will be at a high
8.2 per cent in 2014, or 1.5 percentage points higher than on the day of the
2006 parliamentary election. Cost pressures are being pulled down, and inflation
- both CPI and CPIF inflation (CPI without interest rate changes) - will stay
below 2 per cent during our forecast period. Meanwehile global monetary policy
is moving towards greater flexibility in interpreting the scope for inflation,
and this will result in expansionary monetary conditions for extended periods.
The Riksbank will find it difficult to "stand out from the crowd" without
pushing up the value of the Swedish krona. Our forecast is that in effective
exchange rate terms (TCW), the krona will appreciate by 4 per cent. This is
equivalent to an interest rate hike of around 1 percentage point. In December
2013, the EUR/SEK and USD/SEK exchange rates will be 8.30 and 6.50,
respectively; in December 2014 they will stand at 8.10 and 6.75.
As earlier, the joker in the pack when setting the key interest rate is
household debt. Our forecast is that household debts will increase by 4-5 per
cent a year in 2013-2014. We believe this is consistent with the Riksbank's
tolerance level. According to our calculations, stable home prices combined with
low residential investments indicate that lending growth will decelerate rather
than accelerate. Too much focus on debt may also turn into a growth risk for
Sweden. Â Looking ahead, we expect housing construction in Sweden to be low in
relation to population growth. This is due to such factors as building
legislation and rent controls, which affect profitability. Since the Swedish
political landscape does not allow room for decisions that will stimulate
construction, understandably restrictive lending practices may also worsen the
construction situation even more, adversely affecting long-term growth. The need
for macroprudential supervisory tools is increasing, but due to disunity among
the Riksbank, government and Financial Supervisory Authority about these tools
and the allocation of responsibility - as well as the need for international
coordination - it may take time before such tools are in place. This is a major
dilemma for the Riksbank.
A subdued global recovery will mean that the other Nordic countries and the
Baltic countries must rely on stronger domestic demand - consumption and capital
spending - for increased economic activity during the next two years. The
potential is good, thanks to generally strong fundamentals. Norway will continue
to stand out, sustained by both its domestic economy and demand for oil. GDP
growth will end up at 2.4 per cent in 2013 and 2.3 per cent in 2014. Norges Bank
will begin its interest rate hiking cycle this autumn; the bank's key rate (now
1.50 per cent) will be 1.75 per cent at the end of this year and at 2.50 per
cent at the end of 2014. If appreciation pressure against the Norwegian krone
becomes too great, key rate hikes will be postponed. Meanwhile the situation is
troublingly weak in Denmark and Finland, and GDP growth will barely exceed 1.5
per cent in 2014. Danish households are being squeezed by high debt and a
continued weak real estate market. Finland's export sector is clearly feeling
the impact of problems elsewhere in Europe, but is expected to benefit from the
higher Swedish krona. In Estonia and Lithuania, growth will end up just above 3
per cent in 2013 while Latvia will achieve nearly 4 per cent. During 2014,
growth in the three Baltic countries will reach around 4 per cent. A continued
favourable economic trend in the Baltics may be jeopradised by accelerating pay
increases, in the absence of corresponding productivity gains. Latvia will
switch to the euro on January 1, 2014.
Key figures: International and Swedish economy
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|International economy. GDP, year-on-year changes, %|2011|2012|2013|2014|
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|United States |1.8 |2.2 |2.1 |2.7 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Euro zone |1.4 |-0.5|-0.3|0.9 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Japan |-0.5|2.0 |1.3 |1.5 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|OECD |1.8 |1.3 |1.5 |2.1 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|China |9.3 |7.8 |8.1 |7.7 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Nordic countries |2.3 |1.0 |1.3 |2.2 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Baltic countries |6.4 |4.0 |3.4 |3.9 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|The world (purchasing power parities, PPP) |3.8 |3.3 |3.7 |4.1 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Swedish economy. Year-on-year changes, % | Â | Â | Â | Â |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|GDP, actual |3.7 |0.8 |1.2 |2.5 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|GDP, working day corrected |3.7 |1.1 |1.2 |2.7 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Unemployment, % (EU definition) |7.5 |7.7 |8.2 |8.2 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation |3.0 |0.9 |0.1 |1.3 |
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Government net lending (% of GDP) |0.2 |-0.7|-1.3|-1.3|
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Repo rate (December) |1.75|1.00|0.75|0.75|
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
|Exchange rate, EUR/SEK (December) |8.91|8.58|8.30|8.10|
+---------------------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+
For more information, please contact Press contact
Robert Bergqvist, +46 70 445 1404 Anna Helsén, Press & PR
Daniel Bergvall, +46 8 763 8594 +46 70 698 4858
Mattias Bruér, +46 8 763 8506 anna.helsen@seb.se
Olle Holmgren , +46 8 763 8079
Mikael Johansson, +46 8 763 8093
Andreas Johnson, +46 8 763 8032
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SEB is a leading Nordic financial services group. As a relationship bank, SEB
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Press release (PDF):
http://hugin.info/1208/R/1677208/546879.pdf
Nordic Outlook:
http://hugin.info/1208/R/1677208/546881.pdf
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