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Money & Cycles Weekly Bulletin

Stockbuilding cycle peak confirmed

April 7, 2026 by Simon Ward

        • An inventories indicator from business surveys suggests that an expected downswing in the global stockbuilding cycle is under way (see charts).
        • Full data confirmed a March fall in global manufacturing PMI new orders, with the decline echoed in national surveys (see charts).
        • The US March employment report likely overstates labour market resilience (see charts).
        • Still, recent economic news will have reinforced Fed hawkishness, according to a simple model (see charts).
        • A surprise jump in the Chinese NBS manufacturing PMI likely reflects a faulty seasonal adjustment (see charts).
        • Tokyo and Eurozone March core CPI inflation remained tame (see charts).
        • Eurozone unemployment fears are rising, while UK wage growth expectations cooled further in the March Bank of England DMP survey (see charts).

An inventories indicator from business surveys fell below zero, suggesting that an expected downswing in the global stockbuilding cycle is under way:

Chart 1 showing G7 Stockbuilding as % of GDP (yoy change) & Business Survey Inventories Indicator

This suggests further underperformance of cyclical sectors into the cycle low, possibly in Q1 2027:

Chart 2 showing G7 Stockbuilding as % of GDP (yoy change) & MSCI World Cyclical Sectors Relative to Defensive Sectors

Suggestion: use any rally on favourable Gulf War news to reduce exposure.

 

Full data confirmed a March fall in global manufacturing PMI new orders, with the decline echoed in national surveys (ISM for US, NBS for China, Ifo for Germany etc):

Chart 3 showing Global Manufacturing PMI New Orders & G7 + E7 National Business Survey Indicator

Manufacturers are trying to pass on surging input costs:

Chart 4 showing Global Manufacturing PMI Prices

 

US payrolls growth beat expectations but was flattered by favourable weather effects, according to San Francisco Fed analysis (h/t Mike Green):

Table 5 showing Month, Official BLS (Not Weather Adjusted), and Weather-Adjusted (No Regional Heterogeneity)

Similarly, a fall in the unemployment rate is at odds with a further increase in consumer bearishness about the labour market:

Chart 6 showing US Unemployment Rate & Conference Board Consumer Survey Jobs Hard to Find minus Jobs Plentiful

Retail sales rose solidly in February but the six-month real rate of change remained negative:

Chart 7 showing US Personal Consumption & Real Retail Sales (% 6m annualised)

ISM manufacturing new orders fell back, as had been signalled by the customer inventories index moving below 40:

Chart 8 showing US ISM Manufacturing New Orders & Customer Inventories

Delivery delays surged, partly reflecting Gulf War disruption:

Chart 9 showing US ISM Manufacturing Supplier Deliveries

 

The fall in the unemployment rate and rise in ISM supplier deliveries pushed a simple model of the Fed’s historical reaction function further into the tightening zone:

Chart 10 showing US Fed Funds Rate & Fed Policy Direction Probability Indicator

 

The Chinese NBS manufacturing PMI rose sharply in March, in contrast to weaker S&P Global and Cheung Kong surveys:

Chart 11 showing China Manufacturing PMIs & CKGSB* Business Conditions Index (sa)

The NBS PMI is supposedly seasonally adjusted but shows a strong tendency to increase in March, suggesting a much smaller underlying rise, with the “true” index level remaining below 50:

Chart 12 showing China NBS Manufacturing PMI As Reported & After (Additional) Seasonal Adjustment

 

Tokyo March annual CPI inflation – an early guide to national numbers – remained tame:

Chart 13 showing Japan Consumer Prices (% yoy)

So did Eurozone core inflation, while an energy-driven rise in headline is consistent with the ECB staff’s central case forecast:

Chart 14 showing Eurozone Consumer Prices (% yoy)

 

Consumer unemployment expectations picked up further in Germany, Italy and Spain while remaining elevated in France:

Chart 15 showing Eurozone Consumer Survey Unemployment Expectations Balance Expecting Rise over Next 12m

UK wage growth expectations cooled further in the March Bank of England DMP survey, possibly contributing to Governor Bailey walking back prior hawkish messaging:

Chart 16 showing UK Private Average Weekly Regular Earnings (% yoy) & Decision Maker Panel Actual & Expected Wage Growth

NS Partners Ltd.
April 7, 2026