CHILE: Sights on Upcoming General Election, And Possible Shift To Right
Nov-14 11:55
Focus ahead remains on Sunday’s general election, which could see a dramatic shift in the country’s political landscape. The first round of the presidential election will take place, while all 155 seats of the Chamber of Deputies and 26 of the 50 Senate seats will also be up for grabs. See the MNI election preview here.)
Latest polls suggest that no presidential candidate will secure a majority in the first-round vote, with left-wing candidate Jeanette Jara holding a slight lead over hard-right candidate Jose Antonio Kast. However, in an expected second-round run-off on Dec 14, Kast (or another right-wing candidate) is most likely to win, according to the polls.
The first indications of the election trajectory will come with the first official results in the hours after polls close at 2100GMT(1600ET), with a clearer picture around midnight local time (0300GMT/2200ET).
Prospects for a possible shift to the right have supported local assets recently, with USDCLP declining to a four-month low this week. The trend condition for the pair remains bearish, with sights on 922.67, the Jul 2 low and a key support, which was tested yesterday. A break would open 914.00, the Mar 18 low. On the upside, Initial resistance is at 935.64, the Oct 27 low, with key short-term resistance at 949.13, the 50-day EMA.
The macro calendar remains clear today, with attention on Q3 GDP and current account stats, which are due early next week.
EUROZONE DATA: Ireland Boosts August IP But Weakness Broad Across Big 4, Sectors
Oct-15 11:35
Euro area industrial production fell -1.2% M/M in August, albeit not as weak as the -1.6% expected after all 'big 4' countries contracted. While a July revision (0.5% from 0.3% unrevised) underpins the upward surprise, Ireland had an outsized positive impact this time, at 9.8% M/M. Sequential weakness was broad-based in August with all main categories except non-durable consumer goods down M/M.
All four main Eurozone countries saw M/M declines in August, with Germany standing out negatively at -5.2% (auto slump at least in part attributed to holiday closures and production changeovers), France at -0.7%, Italy at -2.4%, and Spain at -0.1%. These compare to July prints of 1.5%, -0.1%, 0.4% and -0.5%, respectively.
Eurostat added an explicit comment on Ireland's 9.8% M/M print, saying "the high weight of subcontracted production makes the Irish industrial production index volatile, monthly changes can be higher than in other countries". The volatility of the series suggests a risk of reversing in September.
August weakness was broad-based across sectors, with energy at -0.6% M/M (-1.7% prior), intermediate goods at -0.2% (0.5% prior), capital goods at -2.2% (1.7% prior), durable goods at -1.6% (1.2% prior), and only non-durable goods marginally positive at 0.1% (1.8% prior). Also on a Y/Y comparison, all sectors except non-durable consumer goods (8.2% Y/Y, not unusually high for recent months) saw declines in August.
The Eurozone Manufacturing PMI dipped back into contraction zone amid lower factory orders in September: "September’s contraction in the headline [Manufacturing] PMI was driven by a reduction in new order inflows and a sharper rate of job shedding. Production volumes continued to expand, although the pace of growth slowed markedly from August’s near three and-a-half-year high."
SWEDEN: Stabilising Developments In September PES Labour Market Data
Oct-15 11:19
Labour market data from the public employment service (PES) pointed to stabilising developments in September. The Riksbank expects labour market conditions to improve from the start of 2026, so a stabilisation in Q3/Q4 is a necessary first step. LFS unemployment data is due on Friday, with the median analyst expecting an 8.7% unemployment rate (vs 8.8% prior).
The PES unemployment claims rate eased for the second consecutive month to 6.95% in September (vs 7.06% in August, 7.10% in June and July).
The stock of vacancies and vacancy growth may have started to bottom out. In September, there were 87k vacancies, up from 81.5k in August for the highest since February. On an annual basis, vacancy growth remains negative a -6% Y/Y, but this is still above August’s -14% and July’s -22%.
The 3mma of redundancy notices fell to 4,775, down from 4,922 in August for the lowest in over two years.