The International Monetary Fund said global growth will slow this year more than it previously forecast, partly because of recent stress in the financial sector.
Planned oil production cuts by OPEC+ are already heralding higher prices, amplifying recession risks as consumers will have less money to spend elsewhere. US inflation cooled only a bit last month, but price pressures remain elevated.
World
Most global central banks may be either close to a peak or already done with interest-rate hiking, auguring a hiatus before possible monetary loosening comes into view. Policymakers in South Korea, Canada and Peru stayed on hold this week.
US
Just three years ago, when OPEC+ oil giants fell out, the US found itself playing the role of peacemaker. Now it looks more like their target. The announcement of output cuts, which lifted oil prices by about $5 a barrel, already means recession risks are bigger than they otherwise would have been — because consumers spending more on energy will have less cash left for other stuff — and inflation will be higher.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co. are reeling in windfalls from higher interest rates that upended smaller lenders last month. All three firms said income from lending jumped from a year earlier after Fed rate hikes, compared to regional lenders that saw a flood of withdrawals and precipitous stock drops last month.
Europe
Asia
China’s consumer and producer inflation remained muted in March, suggesting more monetary or fiscal stimulus may be needed to strengthen the economy’s recovery. The consumer price index rose 0.7% last month from a year ago, less than the 1% forecast by economists. Producer price deflation worsened to 2.5%, the lowest since June 2020.
Emerging Markets
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa set a target of attracting 2 trillion rand ($110 billion) of new investment in the next five years, as executives pleaded with his government to urgently address the nation’s energy crisis, fix crumbling infrastructure and end rampant crime. The energy crisis alone is robbing the economy of as much as 899 million rand a day, according to the nation’s central bank.
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