China's GDP is projected to grow 6.7% YoY in 3Q15
Oct 19, 2015 02:00 am UTC| Commentary
GDP is projected to grow 6.7% YoY in 3Q15, down from 7.0% in 2Q15, making it the slowest quarter since 1Q09. Key macroeconomic indicators continued to disappoint. Exports and imports contracted 5.9% and 14.4% in 2Q15...
Russia's real wages to show sluggish recovery as inflation backdrop stabilises
Oct 19, 2015 01:52 am UTC| Commentary
The labour market stance is set to remain intact vs a set of previous releases. The unemployment rate is struggling to remain flat at 5.4%, which corresponds to 5.6% in seasonally-adjusted terms. In terms of wages material...
Russia's leading indicators point to continuing slack in retail sales
Oct 19, 2015 00:58 am UTC| Commentary
A survey of consumers conducted by the Rosstat on a quarterly basis did not show any significant changes in sentiment in Q3 15 relative to the Q2 15. While the general population is expecting some improvement in personal...
Russia's investment momentum fails to revert
Oct 19, 2015 00:45 am UTC| Commentary
Despite some room for idiosyncratic tweaks in capital expenditure programmes, the overall backdrop for investment has not improved significantly according to business confidence surveys. The outlook for internal and...
Poland's retail sales growth stabilisation
Oct 19, 2015 00:30 am UTC| Commentary
Polands retail sales growth is expected to remain unchanged on a year-on-year basis in September following a -0.3% drop in August. In monthly terms, the level is likely to have decreased by - 0.6%. Retail sales were mainly...
Poland's industrial output growth to have slowed in September
Oct 19, 2015 00:18 am UTC| Commentary
Polands industrial output growth is expected to have decreased to 4.8% yoy in September from 5.3% in August while in monthly terms of the data should show an increase of 16.0%. The figures are slightly above the market...
China's data: Pay attention to the details
Oct 19, 2015 00:13 am UTC| Commentary
Chinas Q3 real GDP growth is likely to be little changed again. A 0.1pp dip is expected in the headline rate from 7% yoy in Q2 (and Q1) to 6.9% yoy. However, the nominal data and the sector breakdowns are worth paying more...