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Market Updates

Take Two: ECB cuts rates as inflation revised down; China GDP growth slows


What do you need to know?

The European Central Bank (ECB) cut interest rates by 25 basis points (bp) for the third time this year, taking its benchmark rate to 3.25%, after Eurozone inflation fell below its 2% target. The bloc’s annual inflation rate was revised down to 1.7% in September from the earlier official estimate of 1.8% and compared to 2.2% in August. ECB President Christine Lagarde said the “incoming information suggests that economic activity has been somewhat weaker than expected” and added that the latest data points to “more sluggish growth”. AXA IM expects 25bp interest rate cuts at each ECB meeting until June 2025, taking the benchmark rate to 2.0%.


Around the world

China’s economy expanded by an annual 4.6% in the third quarter (Q3), less than Q2’s 4.7% and its slowest pace since early 2023. The figure beat market expectations of 4.5% and suggests that achieving the Chinese government’s ‘around 5%’ growth target is within reach. However, other data released last week including retail sales and industrial production figures were ahead of expectations. Beijing recently pledged fiscal and monetary stimulus measures to help shore up the world’s second-largest economy, which has struggled with problems in the property sector as well as weak domestic demand.

Figure in focus: $100trn

Global public debt is expected to surpass $100trn - around 93% of GDP - by the end of 2024, and approach 100% by 2030, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This is 10 percentage points above 2019’s pre-pandemic level, with China and the US largely driving the increase. Public debt is expected to stabilise or fall for two-thirds of countries, but future debt levels could be higher than projected, partly due to large spending pressures and sizable unidentified debt, the IMF said. It urged nations to tackle risks now “with carefully designed fiscal policies that protect growth and vulnerable households, while taking advantage of the monetary policy easing cycle”.


Words of wisdom

National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans: A crucial framework outlining how individual countries plan to protect biodiversity and tackle its loss. Governments had committed to submit their updated National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs) before the start of the United Nations biodiversity conference COP16, which begins on 21 October. However, over 85% of participating countries were reportedly set to miss this deadline, according to Carbon Brief and the Guardian newspaper last week. Among the 17 ‘megadiverse countries’ - nations which collectively harbour 70% of the world's biodiversity - only five have produced new NBSAPs, they said.

What's coming up?

As well as COP16, Monday marks the start of the Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank Group. On Wednesday the Bank of Canada meets to decide on monetary policy; in September it cut its key interest rate by 25bp, taking it to 4.25%. On Thursday a spate of flash October Purchasing Managers’ Indices are reported, including composite data for the Eurozone, US, UK and Japan. Germany's closely watched Ifo Business Climate Index is issued on Friday. Japan’s general election takes place on Sunday.

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