Mexico 2Q GDP data, surveys point to slower economy
Private-sector analysts have lowered estimates for Mexico's 2024 and 2025 gross domestic product (GDP) growth while raising inflation forecasts for both years, the central bank said Thursday.
For a fourth consecutive month, the survey's median forecasts for GDP growth in 2024 declined, with analysts polled lowering growth estimates to 1.8pc for 2024 from 2pc in last month's survey. The 2025 growth forecast slipped to 1.61pc from 1.78pc.
The shift in forecasts arrives on the heels of preliminary second quarter GDP data, posted by statistics agency Inegi 30 July, showing the economy grew by an annual 2.2pc in the second quarter, up from 1.6pc in the first quarter but slowing from 3.5pc in the second quarter 2023.
The central bank's 2024 GDP estimate was lower than a 2.4pc estimate from Mexican bank Banorte.
Median projections for end-2024 inflation in the central bank's private-sector survey for July moved to 4.58pc from 4.23pc, with end-2025 projections rising to 3.83pc from 3.76pc in the June survey.
The central bank cited higher risks to inflation from a weakening peso and a potentially severe hurricane season in its latest monetary policy decision on 27 June when it held its target interest rate at 11pc. The peso weakened above 19 pesos to the US dollar Friday for the first time since January 2023, extending the losses triggered after 2 June elections that effectively erased congressional opposition to the progressive Morena party. It has weakened from 16.3 pesos to the dollar early April, its strongest level in more than eight years.
Growth in the industrial sector grew by an annual 1.9pc in the second quarter from 0.9pc in the first quarter, while services grew by 2.7pc in the second quarter from 2.1pc in the prior quarter, according to the latest GDP report. Agriculture contracted by 2.7pc in the second quarter from 0.6pc growth in the first quarter.
"The economy's exceptional momentum in previous years may be running out of steam," said Mexican bank Banorte in a note on the GDP report.
Banorte noted uncertainty in manufacturing, "although some of the early nearshoring-related investments could begin to result into more production. In addition, the auto sector remains strong, key to driving the category forward."
The downtrend is supported by comments from ratings agency Moody's out this week, predicting a "substantial slowdown" in the second half of 2024.
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Indian state approves chip, EV manufacturing plants
Indian state approves chip, EV manufacturing plants
London, 6 September (Argus) — The Maharashtra state cabinet in India has approved three foreign investment manufacturing projects — a $1bn semiconductor plant and two battery electric vehicle (EV) and hybrid vehicle factories. The semiconductor chip plant, a joint venture between Israel-based Tower Semiconductor and Indian industrial conglomerate Adani Group, is planned to be built in two phases. The 587.63bn rupees ($7bn) first phase will have a production capacity of 40,000 wafers/month and the Rs251.84bn second phase will add another 40,000 wafers/month, the state's deputy chief minister, Devendra Fadnavis, announced. The facility, to be located outside Mumbai, will be the second semiconductor fabrication plant in the country. The project still needs approval from the central government and Ministry of Electronics and IT, which plans to revise its semiconductor incentives. The project is designed to capitalise on the Indian government's plans to establish a domestic semiconductor manufacturing supply chain, driven by strong local demand in the electronics, EV and manufacturing sectors. Earlier this week, the Indian cabinet approved a proposal from Kaynes Semicon to set up a chip assembly, testing and packaging plant in Gujarat. The Rs33bn plant will have a capacity to handle 6mn chips/d. The governments of India and Singapore on Thursday signed an agreement to co-operate on semiconductor industry development and supply chain resilience, with an eye to Singaporean companies investing in Indian production. The two automotive plants that were also approved by Maharashtra state will be built by Skoda Auto Volkswagen India and Toyota Kirloskar, which is a joint venture between Japan's Toyota Motor and local firm Kirloskar Systems. The Rs150bn Skoda facility in the city of Pune will produce battery electric and hybrid cars. The company already has plants in Pune and Chhatrapati Sambhaji Nagar (previously named Aurangabad), which produce 180,000 cars and 60,000 cars, respectively. The Rs212.73bn Toyota plant will be built in Chhatrapati Sambhaji Nagar and will manufacture battery EVs, hybrids, plug-in hybrids and fuel cell vehicles. The announcement comes after the company signed an initial agreement with the Government of Maharashtra in July to explore setting up a new manufacturing plant in the city. The company operates two automotive plants in Bidadi in the state of Karnataka with an annual installed capacity of 3.42mn vehicles/yr and plans to build a third plant in the town to start operations in 2026 with a capacity of 1mn units/yr. The new plants reflect Toyota Kirloskar's growing product portfolio at it expands into EV manufacturing, rising consumer demand and an increase in exports, the company said. By Nicole Willing Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Canada’s west coast crude exports up ten-fold on TMX
Canada’s west coast crude exports up ten-fold on TMX
Calgary, 6 September (Argus) — Crude exports from Canada's west coast rose sharply in June as shippers were eager to take advantage of enhanced access to Pacific Rim markets, according to Trans Mountain Corporation (TMC). The 590,000 b/d Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pipeline nearly tripled the capacity of the original 300,000 b/d system connecting oil-rich Alberta to Burnaby, British Columbia, with new volumes reaching the Westridge Marine Terminal (WMT) midway through May. Throughputs made a step change in June, the first full month of service, highlighting the pent-up demand among shippers who had waited years for the expansion to be built. Volumes on the Trans Mountain Mainline averaged 704,000 b/d in June, up from 412,000 b/d in May and 300,000 b/d in April, TMC said in its quarterly update. Of those flows, more than half went to the WMT for export in June at 361,000 b/d, ten times the 36,000 b/d sent to the terminal in April. The WMT handled 76,000 b/d of volume in May. Levels at the WMT have held steady in July and August above 350,000 b/d, according to more recent data from Kpler. Most of the volume has gone to China and the US west coast, but cargoes have also been aimed at new markets like Brunei this week . On a quarterly basis, the Mainline handled 471,000 b/d from April-June, up from 349,000 b/d from a year earlier. The WMT handled 157,000 b/d in the second quarter, up from 39,000 b/d across the same period. The Trans Mountain system also has a terminal at the Canada-US border near Sumas, Washington, that diverts crude to refineries in Washington state via the company's 111 kilometre (69 mile) Puget Sound Pipeline. Movements on Puget Sound rose to 246,000 b/d in June, up from 241,000 b/d in May and 199,000 b/d in April. Across the quarter, Puget Sound moved 229,000 b/d, up from 233,000 b/d in the same quarter 2023. Carrying costs for the highly-leveraged C$34bn ($25bn) TMX project weighed on the company's earnings despite an increase in toll-related revenues. Trans Mountain ended the second quarter with C$26.2bn of total debt, up from C$20.1bn a year earlier. Trans Mountain posted a loss of C$48mn in the second quarter, down from a C$172mn profit during the same quarter of 2023. By Brett Holmes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
US adds 142,000 jobs in August, unemployment at 4.2pc
US adds 142,000 jobs in August, unemployment at 4.2pc
Houston, 6 September (Argus) — The US added 142,000 nonfarm jobs in August, fewer than forecast, raising the odds of a half-point rate cut at the Federal Reserve's policy meeting in two weeks. The job gains followed downwardly revised gains of 118,000 for June and 89,000 for July, for combined losses of 86,000 for the two prior months, according to the Labor Department. The gains in August were below the average monthly gain of 202,000 for the prior 12 months. The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.2pc in August from 4.3pc in July, still near five-decade lows of 3.4pc reached in early 2023. The gains were slightly lower than the 160,000 job gains forecast in a survey by Trading Economics, increasing the odds of a 50 basis point cut in the target rate to 45pc probability today from 40pc Thursday, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Odds of a quarter point cut fell to 55pc today from 60pc the day prior. Fed policy makers in late July kept their target rate unchanged at a 23-year high, but Fed chair Jerome Powell told a bankers symposium last month that the "time has come for policy to adjust," his clearest signal that the Fed is ready to begin lowering borrowing costs as inflation has slowed markedly and the labor market was beginning to show signs of weakening. A rate cut after the 18 September Fed meeting would come less than two months before the US presidential election on 5 November. Job gains were reported in construction and health care. Health care added 31,000 jobs in August, about half the monthly gain in the prior year. Construction added 34,000 jobs, more than the average. Manufacturing jobs fell by 24,000 in August. Employment was little changed in other major industries, including mining and oil and gas extraction. Average hourly earnings increased by 3.8pc over the 12 months ending in August, up from 3.6pc through July. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
PCC BakkiSilicon calls for trade defence on Chinese Si
PCC BakkiSilicon calls for trade defence on Chinese Si
London, 6 September (Argus) — Iceland's PCC BakkiSilicon has renewed its call for political support to apply increased anti-dumping duties on silicon metal from China, produced at lower prices with higher emissions, after PCC received an International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC) certifying its CO2 equivalent footprint. PCC BakkiSilicon — the Icelandic subsidiary of Germany's PCC SE — is discussing protective measures on an EU level through industry association Euroalliages, and directly with the German and Icelandic governments, a company representative told Argus . "Protective measures for the silicon industry should consist of an increase of anti-dumping duties from China," the representative said. "As well as stronger measures to comply with supply chain law requirements to prevent imports of material that is being produced under violation of human rights, work safety and environmental standards," they added. Silicon metal imported into the EU from China is already subject to an anti-dumping duty of 16.8pc (or 16.3pc for Datong Jinneng Industrial Silicon) originally imposed on 1 July 2016, and renewed on 11 August 2022 after a request for review from Euroalliages. Anti-dumping measures are usually imposed for five years, but interested parties may ask for an interim review provided that there is sufficient evidence of changed circumstances. Interim reviews usually concern the level of duty in force, but can also extend to injury, scope and form of measures. Whether an interim review can be requested remains open at the time being, the PCC representative said. The renewed political plea comes as PCC is the first silicon producer to receive ISCC Carbon Footprint Certification, confirming a footprint of 3,102.56kg CO2 equivalent (CO2e) per t of silicon metal — as produced in the reference period from 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2023. This is compared with a global industry average of 10,900kg CO2e/t of silicon metal, according to PCC, and the company estimates that Chinese manufacturers are operating far above this number. "The material produced so efficiently in environmental terms by PCC in Iceland is rarely measured by customers in Europe against criteria such as sustainability or climate protection, but still only against price," PCC SE chief executive Peter Wenzel said. By Samuel Wood Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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