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Weekly Report - 23 April 2009 (WR-09-16)

TRACKING TRENDS

MEXICO | A horror story. The central bank cut interest rates on 17 April by 0.75 basis points to 6%. The Banco de México's move came after some grim industrial production figures. The central bank also forecast that the economy would contract by more than it had previously forecast in 2009, though the bank refused to put a figure on the size of the contraction. It did claim that the economy would grow by 2% in 2010.
On 22 April the IMF published its World Economic Outlook which forecast that the economy would contract by 3.7% in 2009. Only The Bahamas, with a 4.5% contraction, is forecast by the IMF to do worse in the Western Hemisphere. The IMF forecasts the US will contract by 2.8% in 2009.
The consensus amongst independent analysts polled by the Banco de México is for the economy to contract by 3.3% this year. Some long term Mexico-watchers, such as Alfredo Coutiño, now at Moody's, a credit rating agency, expect a contraction of between 4% and 6%.
Industrial production showed a 13.2% year-on-year decline in February. This was the biggest year-on-year drop since April 1995. In calendar 1995, GDP contracted by 6.2%. The big worry for policymakers was the 16.1% year-on-year fall in manufacturing output. Even electricity demand was down by 6.5%.
The central bank says that the current economic crisis is the worst for six decades. The bank is clearly not bothering about inflation, which is still running at around 6% a year. The recent strong showing by the peso (which recovered to M$13.2 against the dollar on 22 April from M$15.5 on 9 March) will help to lower inflation, but will not boost Mexican exports.

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