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Doubts over global growth – chemical production edition

 

Changes in economy occurs first at micro levels (companies, production of goods), which then gets reflected in macro levels (GDP, inflation).

  • In lot many ways, growth in chemical companies viz. production is a leading economic indicator and the current condition is expressed nicely in a chart from ICIS, a market intelligence provider in chemical and fertilizer industry.
  • Global growth peaked in January 2014 to 5.1% have lagged since then and currently at 3.3%
  • Growth in North America has increased significantly from 0.1% in January 2014 to more than 4% as of now. This reaffirms the return of growth in US.
  • Growth in Middle East has slowed from 8% in February 2014 to 4.5% as of now.
  • Growth in Asia slowed to 3.9% from its peak around 8% in early 2014.
  • Growth has remained subdued across Euro zone though it shows some signs of recovery. In central and eastern Europe growth slumped to - 4% however started recovering since then.
  • Latin America continues to experience negative growth.

Analogy -

  • Global recovery would take longer despite strong US economy. Central banks are to keep monetary policies ultra-loose.

  • However as situation improves across Euro zone and ECB vows to keep monetary policy loose, the equities might gain further.

  • Diverging growth in Asia, Middle East and Latin America compared to US, might keep the dollar stronger against the currencies of these regions.
  • Market Data
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