THAILAND: Thailand Heads Into General Election Following House Dissolution

Dec-12 09:40

The Election Commission of Thailand (ECT) signalled its readiness to organise the next general election after Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul pre-empted a no-confidence vote and asked the monarch to dissolve the House of Representatives, as the progressive People's Party (PPLE) reneged on its fragile confidence-and-supply agreement with Anutin and began efforts to topple his government.

  • The ECT confirmed that it drew up a detailed timetable for the election and was ready to publish it early next week, with a February 8 election deemed possible despite ongoing border clashes with Cambodia. Separately, the Cabinet will next week discuss whether it is possible to hold a referendum alongside the general election.
  • The army said that operations against Cambodia will continue regardless of the dissolution of the House, with the government retaining the authority to direct them even in caretaker capacity. Meanwhile, Anutin was due to discuss the border situation in a phone call with US President Donald Trump at 14:30GMT/21:30ICT.
  • It seems that the stand-off that led to the House dissolution was triggered by conflicting interpretations of the vague MoU signed by the BJT and PPLE. The royal decree dissolving the House has now been gazetted, starting the clock for Thailand to hold a general election within 45-60 days (January 26 - February 10).
  • The coming period may see a renewed intensification of lawfare tactics. Thai Enquirer reported that the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) was 'accelerating its review of 44 Move Forward MPs' proposals to amend Section 112, Thailand's lese-majeste law.' If confirmed, this could affect more than half of current PPLE MPs.
  • Meanwhile, the coming days should see major parties unveil their prime ministerial candidates. Each party can nominate up to three people. There has been a tendency to max out this allocation to hedge against scenarios where one or two candidates could be barred from taking office on legal or ethics grounds.

Historical bullets

ITALY DATA: Underlying IP Momentum Sluggish, But Surveys Suggest Improvements

Nov-12 09:36

Italian industrial production rebounded in September, rising 2.8% M/M, well above the 1.5% consensus. August’s already weak reading was revised down to -2.7% (vs -2.4% initial). Stripping out the monthly volatility, which may be a function of seasonal factors, IP momentum remains sluggish. That said, sentiment data points towards a gradual recovery in the months ahead.

  • On a 3m/3m SWDA basis, production was down 0.5% in September, after a 0.6% fall in August.
  • The manufacturing PMI was essentially neutral in October, printing at 49.9 after 49.0 in September and 50.4 in August. Meanwhile, ISTAT’s manufacturing confidence series rose to a 17-month high of 88.3 in October.
  • On a single-month basis, the manufacturing component of IP (which has a weight of around 90%) rose 1.4% M/M (vs -1.9% prior), with mining and quarrying (12.0% M/M) and electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply (8.3% M/M) seeing much larger sequential changes.
  • Within manufacturing, rebounds were seen in all major categories other than textiles (-4.4% M/M vs 3.6% prior).
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UK DATA: Unemployment on course to reach November MPR peak rate ahead of Dec MPC

Nov-12 09:34
  • Just like AWE data, unemployment data is produced using the 3-month average of three single month prints – and each of these three months has a different cohort.
  • For some time now the cohort seen in November 2024, February, May and August has consistently seen higher single month prints than the other two cohorts (which have seen broadly similar readings to each other).
  • There was a significant 0.44ppt increase in the single month unemployment rate seen in the print released last month from 4.87% in May to 5.31% in August which led to the headline 3-month rate increasing from 4.66% to 4.83%.
  • Expectations had been that the September single month print would see a smaller jump relative to June. As it turns out, however, a marginally larger 0.47ppt change was seen in this cohort’s single month print from 4.56% in June to 5.03% in September. This left the headline 3-month rate at 4.97% (around a tenth above consensus).
  • To put this into context, the 4.97% print today is the Bank of England’s Q4 forecast and it has been reached a quarter earlier than expected (making last week’s MPR projections already look a bit stale).
  • If we assume that we see a similar increase in the single month rate between July and October we would be left with a headline 3-month unemployment rate marginally above 5.1%. Indeed, to round up to a 5.1% print the next cohort only needs to see a 0.25ppt increase between October and July - so almost 2 tenths lower than seen in the other two cohorts.
  • The latest MPR projections only see a 5.1% print reached by Q2-26 before falling back to 5.0% or lower through the rest of the forecast. This does therefore seem to be meaningful downside news.
  • Note that if we do see this 5.1% print in the October data, the MPC would see this print on the Monday morning ahead of their December policy decision. Obviously we still have inflation data to come, but it does appear that the labour market data is doing its job to convince Governor Bailey that the soft print seen ahead of the November MPC meeting was not a one-off.

Note that this is an extract from the MNI UK Labour Market Insight - for the full document click here.

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GILT SYNDICATION: 1.75% Sep-38 linker: Guidance unchanged

Nov-12 09:31
  • Size: GBP Benchmark (MNI expects GBP GBP4.5-5.5bln)
  • Books in excess of GBP55bln (inc JLM interest of GBP3.9bln)
  • Guidance unchanged : 1.125% Nov-37 linker (GB00B1L6W962) +10.50 / +10.75bps
  • ISIN: GB00BMY62Z61
  • Expected Settlement Date: 13-November-2025 (T+1)
  • JLMs: GSIB (B&D/DM) / JPM / NOMURA / SANTANDER
  • Timing: Books open, today’s business (MNI expects books to close at 10:00GMT)

Source: Market source and MNI colour