Neil Shearing
@neilshearing.bsky.social
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Group Chief Economist, Capital Economics; Associate Fellow, Chatham House
Wrote a piece for
@theworldtoday.org
and
@chathamhouse.org
on US-China fracturing and what we get wrong about the future of globalisation...
add a skeleton here at some point
23 days ago
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Neil Shearing
Robin Brooks
5 months ago
There's nothing good about high and rising US Treasury yields. The only silver lining is that it shuts down all the
#MMT
nonsense of recent years, which claimed that "deficits don't matter." Deficits do matter and fiscal space is very much finite. Time for
#MMT
to finally go the way of the dodo...
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Wrote this last month in the wake of the April 2nd tariff chaos. Still feels like a reasonable base case.
5 months ago
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The collapse in port berth bookings in US looks alarming but here's some important context - YTD port throughput at LA Long Beach is already up ~10% on last year as firms have sought to front-run tariffs. Inventory-to-sales ratios also rising.
5 months ago
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Today feels like a good day to announce the publication of my book, “The Fractured Age”.
6 months ago
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😬
7 months ago
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Striking that China has announced a target for REAL GDP growth this year of 5% but the budget docs from today's Work Plan suggest that the government is expecting NOMINAL GDP growth of just ~4.9%. So much for a reflationary recovery.
7 months ago
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reposted by
Neil Shearing
Tom Hearden
7 months ago
“Why don’t you say thank you”
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Neil Shearing
Jim Pickard
7 months ago
Brexit has never looked quite so daft
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I used to be disgusted, now I try to be amused. (Appreciate the macro/Elvis Costello Venn Diagram overlap is niche)
add a skeleton here at some point
7 months ago
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My latest - pushing back on the idea that we're witnessing a fundamental geoeconomic realignment. Weird times but there's still more that unites than divides the US and Europe. The big schism remains between the US and China.
www.capitaleconomics.com/blog/geoecon...
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A geoeconomic realignment – or is it? | Capital Economics
Ernest Hemingway’s line about bankruptcy happening “gradually, then suddenly” can apply to the geopolitical mood too.
https://www.capitaleconomics.com/blog/geoeconomic-realignment-or-it
7 months ago
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That's my headstone sorted
9 months ago
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Updated our estimates of the UK government's headroom against its fiscal rules after this week's gilt sell-off. It's... tight...
9 months ago
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Meanwhile....
9 months ago
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Rise in vacancies has rattled the bond market today - but drop in the quits rate telling a different story...
9 months ago
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Neil Shearing
Henry Mance
11 months ago
Starmer cannot survive this
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Looked at how other countries responded to US tariffs in the first Trump administration. Key points:
11 months ago
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Of all the dumb things that I've seen said about tariffs over the past couple of weeks, the dumbest is that they help to close trade deficits.
11 months ago
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Back from meetings with clients in the US. Still think everyone is too optimistic on the likelihood of additional significant tax cuts under Trump (beyond the extension of the 2018 cuts).
11 months ago
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Thoughts on where we stand after the latest data. Become more concerned about labour markets, but soft landing still seems most likely outcome. With that said, “data dependence” is no way to anchor policy.
www.capitaleconomics.com/blog/data-sp...
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As the data spin contrasting economic narratives, which will central banks follow? | Capital Economics
So much for staying ‘data dependent’.
https://www.capitaleconomics.com/blog/data-spin-contrasting-economic-narratives-which-will-central-banks-follow
about 1 year ago
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