Macro Intelligence · Weekly · deep read

Macro Regime — 2024-W33

US · China · EU · Japan · mechanism-first, taught

Read at: thesis narrative mechanism data
⚠ 2 very-stale + 0 stale series across the four blocs — flagged inline.

ThesisL0

(historical week — no Claude narration run)

Standing pictureL1

Mechanisms & channelsL2

United States

M6Growth slowdown (deepening contraction)
Trigger: pmi_mfg: 48.5 → 46.8 (-1.7)
  1. Manufacturing PMIPMI — Purchasing Managers' Index. Above 50 = the sector is expanding vs last month; below 50 = contracting. A timely read on activity. is below 50 and still falling.
    Why: Below 50 means more firms are contracting than expanding; *falling* means the contraction is deepening, not bottoming — that combination is what leads earnings revisions down.
  2. Investors rotate toward defensivesdefensives — Sectors whose demand is steady through the cycle — consumer staples, utilities, healthcare. They outperform when growth slows. and government bonds.
    Why: When growth is deteriorating, steady-demand sectors (staples, utilities, healthcare) hold earnings better, and government bonds act as a hedge that rallies if the slowdown deepens further.
  3. Cyclicalscyclicals — Sectors whose earnings rise and fall with the economic cycle — industrials, materials, energy, consumer discretionary., small-caps, EM and industrial commodities underperform.
    Why: These are geared to the physical cycle and to leverage, so worsening activity hits their earnings and risk appetite hardest; commodity demand softens with industrial output.
Helps
defensive sectors (staples, utilities, healthcare)long government bondsquality/large-cap
Hurts
cyclicalssmall-capsEM equityindustrial commodities
Caveat: A shallow dip just below 50 that quickly reverses ('soft patch') doesn't trigger the full defensive rotation; the level must persist.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).
M10Yield-curve inversion (2s10s < 0)
Trigger: slope_2s10s: -0.16 → -0.17 (-0.01)
  1. The 10-year yield falls below the 2-year (2s10s2s10s — The gap between the 10-year and 2-year government bond yields. Positive = normal upward-sloping curve; negative ('inverted') = a classic late-cycle/recession warning. inverts).
    Why: Normally longer bonds yield more; inversion means the market expects policy ratespolicy rate — The interest rate a central bank sets directly (e.g. the Fed funds rate, the ECB deposit rate, China's LPR). It anchors all other rates. to be lower in the future than now — i.e. it expects cuts, usually because growth is set to weaken.
  2. Bank lending margins compress.
    Why: Banks borrow short and lend long; when long rates sit below short rates, the spread they earn (net interest marginnet interest margin — The spread a bank earns between what it charges on loans and pays on deposits. Higher short rates / steeper curves tend to widen it.) is squeezed, discouraging lending.
  3. Capital rotates toward defensives and durationduration — How sensitive an asset's price is to interest rates. 'Long-duration' assets (long bonds, fast-growing stocks whose profits are years away) move most when rates change. as the cycle turns.
    Why: An inverted curve is a historically reliable late-cycle warning, so investors position ahead of a slowdown — favoring steady-demand defensives and long bonds that rally when cuts arrive.
Helps
long-duration bonds (as the turn approaches)defensivesquality
Hurts
banks (margin compression)cyclicalssmall-caps
Caveat: Inversion has long and variable lead times to any actual downturn; it's a regime warning, not a timing signal, and can persist for months while risk assets keep rising.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).

China

M3Monetary easing (rate cut)
Trigger: policy_rate: 3.45 → 3.35 (-0.1)
  1. The central bank cuts its policy rate.
    Why: The policy rate anchors the entire rate structure, so a cut lowers the risk-free baseline against which every asset is valued.
  2. Discount ratesdiscount rate — The rate used to convert a future cash flow into today's value. A higher discount rate makes far-off cash flows worth less now. fall across asset classes and liquidity expectations rise.
    Why: A lower risk-free rate raises the present value of future cash flows everywhere, and a cut signals the bank will keep conditions loose.
  3. Risk assets re-rate up; the currency softens.
    Why: Cheaper money flows toward higher-returning assets, and a lower local rate narrows the yield advantage of holding the currency, so it weakens.
  4. The weaker currency lifts exporters, commodities, gold, and EM.
    Why: Commodities priced in the easing currency rise in that currency; exporters gain competitiveness; and EM borrowers with dollar debt benefit as the dollar softens.
Helps
equities (broadly)goldEM assetslong-duration bondscommodities
Hurts
the easing currencycash/money-market real yield
Caveat: If the cut is an emergency response to a fast-deteriorating outlook ('cutting into a recession'), equities can fall even as bonds rally — the growth signal outweighs the liquidity boost.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).
M11China credit impulse (easing proxy)
Trigger: policy_rate: 3.45 → 3.35 (-0.1)
  1. China cuts its benchmark lending rate (LPR).
    Why: A lower LPR reduces borrowing costs and is the most visible signal that policymakers want credit to flow — a proxy for a turn-up in the credit impulsecredit impulse — The change in the flow of new credit into an economy. A rising impulse front-runs stronger demand for commodities and cyclical goods, with a lag..
  2. The flow of new credit into the economy turns up.
    Why: Cheaper credit pulls forward borrowing by firms and local governments, raising the change in outstanding credit — the impulse — which leads activity by one to three quarters.
  3. Industrial commodities, China/HK cyclicals, and the EM/commodity-exporter complex benefit.
    Why: China is the marginal buyer of many industrial commodities, so a credit-driven activity pickup lifts their prices and the equities and exporter currencies geared to that demand.
Helps
industrial commoditiesChina/HK cyclicalsEM equitycommodity exporters (AUD, BRL)
Hurts
CNY (on the rate cut)China government bond yields (fall)
Caveat: LPR is only a proxy; the true impulse needs total-social-financing / new-loan data (a Rung-2 addition). A cut without a pickup in actual credit demand ('pushing on a string') doesn't deliver the transmission.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).

Euro area

⚠ Stale inputs (latest print is old): 10Y yield. The standing read uses the most recent available release — treat as provisional.

No active mechanism this week — the standing read above carries the bloc.

What would change the read
  • Monetary easing (rate cut) The policy rate is on hold, so the easing channel is dormant. A cut would fire it — it matters because the first cut of a cycle typically broadens a rally and pressures the currency.
  • Monetary tightening (rate hike) The policy rate is steady, so the tightening channel is dormant. A hike would fire it — watch it because it hits long-duration growth, long bonds, and gold first.
  • Growth acceleration (expansionary PMI) Manufacturing isn't both expanding and accelerating, so the growth-acceleration channel is dormant. A rising PMI back above 50 would fire it — it matters because it's the signal to rotate from defensives toward cyclicals.

Japan

⚠ Stale inputs (latest print is old): 10Y yield. The standing read uses the most recent available release — treat as provisional.
M1Inflation surprise (upside)
Trigger: core_cpi: 1.7 → 1.9 (+0.2)
  1. Core inflation comes in higher than the prior reading.
    Why: Core strips out food and energy, so a move in it signals persistent, broad price pressure rather than a one-off in volatile items — the kind a central bank reacts to.
  2. The market reprices the policy-rate path higher.
    Why: If inflation is stickier than thought, the central bank must keep rates higher for longer to cool it; traders bake that expectation into the whole rate curve immediately, before any actual hike.
  3. Real yieldsreal yield — The yield after subtracting expected inflation — what a lender actually earns in purchasing power. Real yield ≈ nominal yield − expected inflation. rise, not just nominal yieldsnominal yield — The headline interest rate on a bond, before subtracting inflation..
    Why: The inflation is already in the print, so the jump in nominal yields isn't just compensating for higher inflation — it's a genuine rise in the inflation-adjusted return demanded by lenders.
  4. A higher real yield is a higher discount rate on future cash flows.
    Why: Money earned years from now is discounted back to today at the real rate; when that rate rises, distant cash flows shrink in present-value terms more than near ones.
  5. Long-duration growth equities de-rate hardest; banks and value hold up; the currency firms.
    Why: Growth stocks are valued mostly on far-future profits, so a higher discount rate hits them most. Banks earn more as rates rise (wider margins), and value/cyclical earnings sit nearer in time. Higher local rates also pull in foreign capital, lifting the currency.
Helps
financialsvalueUSDshort-duration bonds
Hurts
long-duration growth equitieslong-dated government bondsgold (in real terms)
Caveat: Misfires if the print is read as one-off/transitory, or if growth is simultaneously rolling over (a stagflation mix), where cyclicals don't get the usual lift.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).
M4Monetary tightening (rate hike)
Trigger: policy_rate: 0.1 → 0.25 (+0.15)
  1. The central bank raises its policy rate.
    Why: It lifts the risk-free baseline and signals an intent to drain liquidity to cool demand or inflation.
  2. Discount rates rise; the most rate-sensitive assets are hit first.
    Why: A higher risk-free rate lowers the present value of future cash flows, and long-duration growth, long bonds, and non-yielding gold have the most distant or rate-sensitive payoffs.
  3. The currency firms; exporters and dollar-debt EM borrowers are pressured.
    Why: A wider yield advantage pulls in capital and strengthens the currency, which hurts exporters' competitiveness and raises the real burden on dollar-denominated EM debt.
Helps
the tightening currencycash/short-duration real yieldbanks (early-cycle)
Hurts
long-duration growth equitieslong-dated bondsgoldEM assets
Caveat: Late in a hiking cycle, a hike can paradoxically rally bonds if the market reads it as the last one and pulls forward the eventual cuts.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).
M12BOJ normalization / yen-carry risk
Trigger: policy_rate: 0.1 → 0.25 (+0.15)
  1. The BOJ hikes away from its zero/negative-rate regime.
    Why: Japan was the world's last anchor of ultra-cheap funding; raising its rate narrows the gap that made the yen the preferred currency to borrow in.
  2. JGB yields rise and the yen tends to strengthen.
    Why: Higher policy rates pull Japanese government bond yields up, and a higher yield plus repatriation flows increase demand for yen.
  3. Yen-funded carry tradescarry trade — Borrowing in a low-rate currency (long the yen's case) to buy higher-yielding assets elsewhere. It unwinds violently when the funding rate rises or the funding currency strengthens. unwind, transmitting volatility into global risk assets.
    Why: Investors who borrowed cheap yen to buy higher-yielding assets abroad face higher funding costs and a rising yen on their debt, forcing them to sell those assets — so the shock spreads well beyond Japan.
Helps
JPYJapanese banksyen-based savers
Hurts
JGBs (yields up)yen-funded carry tradesglobal risk assets (on a disorderly unwind)
Caveat: A small, well-telegraphed hike may be absorbed smoothly; the global-risk transmission only bites on a surprise move or a disorderly carry unwind.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).

The dataL3

United States

IndicatorCurrentPriorΔAs of
CPI (YoY)2.902.61+0.29 2024-08-14
Core CPI0.200.25-0.05 2024-08-14
Core PCE2.872.60+0.27 2024-08-01
Policy rate5.505.50+0.00 2024-08-18
GDP2.803.30-0.50 2024-07-25
PMI (mfg)46.8048.50-1.70 2024-08-01
PMI (svc)51.4048.80+2.60 2024-08-05
Unemployment4.304.20+0.10 2024-08-02
10Y yield3.893.92-0.03 2024-08-16
2Y yield4.064.08-0.02 2024-08-16
2s10s slope-0.17-0.16-0.01 2024-08-16
FX vs USD102.46102.98-0.52 2024-08-16

China

IndicatorCurrentPriorΔAs of
CPI (YoY)0.500.20+0.30 2024-08-09
Policy rate3.353.45-0.10 2024-07-22
GDP4.705.30-0.60 2024-07-15
PMI (mfg)49.1049.40-0.30 2024-08-01
PMI (svc)50.2050.50-0.30 2024-07-31
Unemployment5.305.20+0.10 2024-08-01
10Y yield2.202.21-0.01 2024-08-16
2Y yield1.671.68-0.01 2024-08-16
2s10s slope0.530.52+0.00 2024-08-16
FX vs USD7.177.14+0.04 2024-08-16

Euro area

IndicatorCurrentPriorΔAs of
CPI (YoY)2.602.50+0.10 2024-07-31
Policy rate4.254.25+0.00 2024-07-18
GDP0.000.20-0.20 2024-07-31
PMI (mfg)45.8045.60+0.20 2024-08-01
PMI (svc)51.9051.90+0.00 2024-08-05
Unemployment6.506.40+0.10 2024-08-01
10Y yield2.913.11-0.21 2024-08-01 ⚠⚠
FX vs USD1.101.10-0.00 2024-08-16

Japan

IndicatorCurrentPriorΔAs of
CPI (YoY)2.802.80+0.00 2024-07-19
Core CPI1.901.70+0.20 2024-07-19
Policy rate0.250.10+0.15 2024-07-31
GDPn/a
PMI (mfg)n/a
Unemployment2.502.60-0.10 2024-07-30
10Y yield0.891.04-0.15 2024-08-01 ⚠⚠
FX vs USD149.22147.25+1.97 2024-08-16

Concept libraryL3

Terms marked ✓ are linked inline above — click any dotted term in the text to expand it in place.

2s10s ✓
The gap between the 10-year and 2-year government bond yields. Positive = normal upward-sloping curve; negative ('inverted') = a classic late-cycle/recession warning.
PMI ✓
Purchasing Managers' Index. Above 50 = the sector is expanding vs last month; below 50 = contracting. A timely read on activity.
carry trade ✓
Borrowing in a low-rate currency (long the yen's case) to buy higher-yielding assets elsewhere. It unwinds violently when the funding rate rises or the funding currency strengthens.
credit impulse ✓
The change in the flow of new credit into an economy. A rising impulse front-runs stronger demand for commodities and cyclical goods, with a lag.
cyclicals ✓
Sectors whose earnings rise and fall with the economic cycle — industrials, materials, energy, consumer discretionary.
defensives ✓
Sectors whose demand is steady through the cycle — consumer staples, utilities, healthcare. They outperform when growth slows.
discount rate ✓
The rate used to convert a future cash flow into today's value. A higher discount rate makes far-off cash flows worth less now.
disinflation
Inflation that is still positive but falling (prices rising more slowly) — distinct from deflation, where prices actually fall.
duration ✓
How sensitive an asset's price is to interest rates. 'Long-duration' assets (long bonds, fast-growing stocks whose profits are years away) move most when rates change.
net interest margin ✓
The spread a bank earns between what it charges on loans and pays on deposits. Higher short rates / steeper curves tend to widen it.
nominal yield ✓
The headline interest rate on a bond, before subtracting inflation.
policy rate ✓
The interest rate a central bank sets directly (e.g. the Fed funds rate, the ECB deposit rate, China's LPR). It anchors all other rates.
rate path
The market's expectation of where the policy rate goes over the next year or two — not just today's level, but the whole expected trajectory.
real yield ✓
The yield after subtracting expected inflation — what a lender actually earns in purchasing power. Real yield ≈ nominal yield − expected inflation.
term premium
The extra yield investors demand to hold a long bond instead of rolling short ones — compensation for tying money up and for issuance/inflation risk.