Money & Cycles Weekly Bulletin
Softer PMIs + mostly useless US data
December 22, 2025 by Simon Ward
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- December flash PMI results were mostly weaker, consistent with the forecast of a loss of global economic momentum into early 2026 (see charts).
- It might have been better to have delayed US labour market and CPI reports for another month given distortions from the government shutdown (see charts).
- The Chinese authorities have allowed the RMB to move above its central parity rate vs. the US dollar but continue to resist appreciation vs. the basket (see charts).
- Japanese annual “global core” CPI inflation remained below 2% (see charts).
- German manufacturing surveys weakened as expected but the ECB signalled a firm hold (see charts).
- UK core CPI momentum has slowed sharply as policy effects fade but MPC hawks are proving surprisingly stubborn (see charts).
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Global manufacturing PMI new orders and service new business indices likely fell in December, based on DM flash results:

Declines would be consistent with lagged money trends suggesting an economic slowdown into early 2026 followed by stabilisation / recovery in the spring.
US composite results were notably softer with smaller declines in Japan and the Eurozone but a positive UK surprise:

US private payrolls growth held up in October / November but the true picture may be flat, based on the average recent revision:
The suggestion that payrolls numbers are continuing to overstate growth is supported by comprehensive QCEW data showing a big shortfall in the year to June:
The unemployment rate climbed further between September and November but the rise at least partly reflects bias introduced by the failure to conduct an October survey:
The reported increase was due to temporary layoffs and people entering the labour force, rather than a rise in permanent job losers.
An apparent sharp slowdown in headline / core CPI momentum is even more suspect, with the BLS adopting an assumption of zero monthly change for some items with missing October data:
The Chinese authorities have allowed the RMB to move above its central parity rate vs. the US dollar but continue to intervene to prevent an appreciation vs. the basket:
The Bank of Japan hiked despite annual core CPI inflation – on the global definition excluding all food and energy – of below 2%:
German manufacturing surveys weakened, as had been suggested by lagged money trends and the earlier Sentix survey:
Still, the ECB signalled that it is firmly on hold, with staff forecasts for annual headline / core CPI inflation in 2026 revised higher:
Annual average inflation rates in 2026 are now 1.9% for headline and 2.2% for core vs. 1.7% and 1.9% respectively in September.
UK annual headline and core inflation surprised significantly to the downside in November:
Forecast: annual headline to fall to c.2% in Q2 2026 and undershoot in H2.
Adjusted core prices rose by 1.9% annualised in the three months to November from the previous three months, and by 1.8% between August and November:
The headline surprise partly reflected a drop in food inflation, with a further catch-down towards the Eurozone level likely:
Job losses appear to have accelerated in the run-up to last month’s Budget:
However, vacancies have stabilised, as had been indicated by Indeed data:

Annual growth of private regular earnings fell further but MPC hawks are expressing concern about too-high survey indications for next year:
Worries are overblown, with wage demands likely to ratchet down with headline inflation.












