Solutions
SOLUTIONS
INSIGHTS
NEWS AND EVENTS
RESEARCH | 3 POINT PERSPECTIVE | MACRO SHIFTS
Contributors: Ajay Rajadhyaksha & Amrut Nashikkar
13 Nov 2024
GO TO SECTION
Yes, there have been setbacks lately. The US jobs report for October seemed a little weak, even after adjusting for hurricanes and strikes. The UK budget was poorly received by the gilt market. Japan’s political situation is fragile, with any new coalition likely to be shaky.
But consider the big picture. The US has been very resilient, growing around 3% in recent quarters; the jobless rate is still 4.1% and November payrolls are likely to see a sharp bounce-back. The euro area is growing at trend. China has finally started stimulating. Oil prices remain low even with the war in the Middle East into its second year. Inflation across the West has been falling. And central banks have started easing despite low jobless rates.
The weighted-average tariff on all US imports is currently 2%. That could rise as high as 17%, under the plan outlined by Donald Trump on the campaign trail.
But our Research analysts think the president-elect should be taken seriously but not literally. In his first term, he used the threat of tariffs to get new trade deals with Mexico and Canada. He also equates stock market returns with economic success. If equities fall because high tariffs seem likely, the new administration could well soften its stance.
Immigration policy will also be in focus. Our analysts’ expectation is for new arrivals to slow considerably, but for deportations to run at the same pace as in the Obama presidency – and far slower than the campaign has promised. On the growth-positive side are the prospect of significant deregulation and a fiscal boost, assuming all the expiring tax cuts are extended.
All in, our Research analysts see US growth dropping from a near-3% rate to a still-healthy 2% in 2025. Global growth should slow just a little, to 3%, from 3.2% in 2024.
US Treasuries look fairly priced but still not cheap, given solid US growth, the prospect of higher issuance in 2025, and rapidly rising deficits, if all the tax cuts from 2017 are extended.
The US dollar still has scope to strengthen further, despite interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, given continued US resilience and tariffs. Equity valuations are elevated after two years of 20-25% returns in the S&P500, and 2025 earnings expectations seem a little optimistic to our analysts.
But momentum and hopes for a lighter-touch regulatory regime should push equities higher for now, along with a collective exhale after the elections. A “melt-up” into year-end is a real possibility.
About the experts
Ajay Rajadhyaksha
Global Chairman of Research
Amrut Nashikkar
Managing Director, Fixed Income Strategy
* We acknowledge and agree for Barclays to collect, use and otherwise process our/the Relevant Individual's Information in accordance with the Notice, other effective privacy terms and information processing terms agreed by ourselves/the Relevant Individual with Barclays, for the purposes set out therein, respectively.
* We acknowledge and agree that Barclays may disclose to any third party described in the Notice as a potential recipient of data outside mainland China our.the Relevant Individual's Information in accordance with the Notice, other effective privacy terms and personal information processing terms agreed by ourselves/the Relevant Individual with Barclays, and for the purposes set out therein, respectively.
I consent to my email address being used by Barclays to provide me with personalized advertisements on third-party websites and social media platforms, as described in our Privacy Notice.
An email was sent to you at the address provided. Complete your subscription by clicking the link provided to verify your email address.
Sorry there was a problem. Unfortunately your subscription to our newsletter has encountered an error.
In addition to the cookies we use on our website, we also use cookies and similar technologies in some emails and push notifications. These help us to understand whether you have opened the email and how you have interacted with it. If you have enabled images, cookies may be set on your computer or mobile device. Cookies will also be set if you click on any link within the email.
Please review and manage your email cookie settings below. For more information, please read our Cookie Policy. Please select 'Save and Subscribe' below to remember your email cookie preferences and subscribe to the newsletter.