Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Sentiments
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • Lenovo posts record results
  • The Housing Market Gets Bubbly Again
  • EU Corks Plan to Restrict Olive Oil in Restaurants
  • Why Merck Shares Are Cheap And Could Rise To $60
  • HEDGE FUND LEGEND: If One Of My Managers Is Getting...
  • Diluent shortages could make for sticky situation for...
  • Video: See the first Apple computer, now worth more than...
  • High street blight: are pound shops better than empty...
  • Nissan recalls Micras over steering problem
  • Glencore and Trafigura 'may have supplied Iran'...

    Leading Indicators: Key Economies and the BRICs

    Sun, 08/16/2009 - 19:47 EDT - EconBrowser
    • Comments
    • economic indicators

    A month ago, I examined the information content of the OECD's Composite Leading Indicators. The August release (for June data) is out. There's substantial variation in the implied outlook across economies.

    oecdlei1.gif

    Figure 1: Normalized Composite Leading Indicators for US (blue), euro area (salmon) and Japan (green). Above 100 indicates expansion, below contraction. Dashed line at 2008M09, at the financial crisis. Source: OECD.

    oecdlei2.gif

    Figure 2: Normalized Composite Leading Indicators for Brazil (dark blue), Russia (purple) and India (yellow) and China (orange). Above 100 indicates expansion, below contraction. Dashed line at 2008M09, at the financial crisis. Source: OECD.

    The documentation for the CLI are here, while an econometric evaluation of the CLI by Fichtner, Reuffer and Schnatz is here.

    Notice that indeed things are looking up in the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, China), with perhaps the exception of Russia. Or, more accurately, things are looking less bad in those countries.

    To keep things in perspective, 2008 US GDP (evaluated at market exchange rates) was about 23.5% of world GDP (all ratios from April 2009 IMF World Economic Outlook database), while these three economies in aggregate accounted for 54% of world GDP. The BRICs accounted for 14.6%. China is 7.3% of world GDP, so even with growth resuming, something else will be needed to get world growth back to near normal rates [1].

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • Prospects for Growth And Rebalancing

      From an article in the newest issue of GlobalAsia: Only a few months ago, policymakers around the world were confronted with a series of challenges that, while substantial, seemed relatively well defined. International organizations such as the International Monetary Fund and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development highlighted the challenges of a two-speed recovery: emerging markets racing ahead, advanced economies plodding along.

    • The Informational Content of the OECD Leading Indicators

      Sunday's NYT had a great interactive graphics by Amanda Cox detailing the dynamics of recessions and recoveries. One interesting graph pertained to the OECD Leading Indicators:

    • OECD sees slower growth in industrialised countries

      Economic momentum in the world's leading industrialised countries slowed in August when a key index showed "negligible or negative growth," the OECD said Monday."OECD composite leading indicators (CLI) for August 2010 reinforce signals of slowing economic expansion already seen" in July, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said.The OECD area CLI slipped 0.1 point in August, the fourth month of "negligible or negative growth," it said.

    • Welcome to the post-BRIC world

      DECLARING an end to the BRIC era might seem the height of foolishness. Last year Brazil, China, India, and Russia accounted for a quarter of global output, a figure that is forecast to rise to about one-third by the end of the decade. China will probably become the world's largest economy before then. India should continue to rise through the ranks as well.

    • Update on Brazil, BRICs

      In response to Brazil is World's 6th Largest Economy, Overtaking UK Earlier this Year. Can Brazil Overtake France by 2016? What about BRICs in General? I received a nice email from Felipe Fiel, an economist from Brazil working in the hedge fund industry for Fram Capital. Felipe writes ...

    • Three Pictures: China's Exchange Rate and Trade Balances

      There's plenty of commentary on the ongoing China-US Strategic Economic Dialog, from the Economist [1], Reuters [2], [3], and Bloomberg [4] [5].

    • Jan. OECD Leading Index: Highest Level Since 2007

       OECD (March 14) -- "Compos

    • UK: No Expansionary Fiscal Contraction Yet

      The UK can be seen as a kind of test case for the proposition that contractionary fiscal policy can induce an economic expansion, a proposition forwarded by most recently Alesina and Ardana (2010) [wp version] (following up earlier work by Alesina and Perroti). So far, admittedly early in the process, the evidence is not consistent with the view of expansionary contraction.

    • OECD CLIs Point To A Possible Peak In Expansion

      OECD composite leading indicators (CLIs) for June 2010 point to a possible peak in expansion. The CLI for the OECD area decreased by 0.1 point in June 2010.

    • Credit Stock Growth versus New Credit

      Deleveraging implies slow growth in total credit, and according to the usual reasoning, slow growth in GDP. Several of Deutsche Bank's economists, however, focus on what they call the credit impulse. They provide the following provocative graph, which suggests a rapid recovery: Figure 8 from Deutsche Bank, Global Economic Perspectives, Sep.

    Latest

    Paul Tudor Jones Is Shifting His Strategy, And Traders Are Leaving His Fund
    HEDGE FUND LEGEND: If One Of My Managers Is...
    January Jones Says It's None Of Your Business Who Her Baby Daddy Is
    January Jones Says It's None Of Your...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Pandora: the charm might fade away
    • Japanese Market, Indian Rupee, China’s Stocks and Oil Prices in Our Daily Round-Up for 05/23/2013
    • IMF calls on Osborne to spend on infrastructure

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1650.51 -0.29% FTSE: 6696.79 -2.14% Nikk.: 14483.98 -7.89% DAX: 8351.98 -2.14% HSI: 22669.68 -2.61% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.168 USD/EUR: 1.2936 JPY/USD: 101.7765 Commodities: Gold: 1392.55

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions