International Economic Week In Review For July 16-20

 | Jul 23, 2018 01:46AM ET

h2 Summary

While the world economy is still in good shape, some cracks are appearing.

The tariff wars are starting to take their toll on global sentiment.

World equity markets are taking some hits.

Earlier this month, the IMF released its revised World Economic Outlook . While the release is moderately dated, I want to look at it in today's column because it contains a number of salient points.

Growth projections have been revised down for the euro area, Japan, and the United Kingdom, reflecting negative surprises to activity in early 2018.

As I've noted over the last few weeks, the U.S. economy is doing very well (please see this summation in the latest Beige Book). But we've started to see an increasing number of sentiment reports indicating international business is growing concerned. The ZEW number out of Germany has cratered while the latest round of Markit numbers for the EU show a business community that is more on edge. While still high, the European Commission's sentiment number is down . Japan's numbers have been OK, but slightly weaker (retail sales have contracted in three of the last five months; industrial production has been trending lower and contracted in the latest reading). And the UK is three months out from Brexit without a deal in place - and, as of this writing, not much hope of one being signed. The possibility of a hard Brexit (where the rules literally change overnight) is increasing. May's cabinet is in turmoil and members of other EU countries are expressing concern.

Among emerging market and developing economies, growth prospects are also becoming more uneven, amid rising oil prices, higher yields in the United States, escalating trade tensions, and market pressures on the currencies of some economies with weaker fundamentals.

Some EMEs issue bonds tied to dollars; as the dollar rises, the country has to pay more to finance its debt. Most of these countries are natural resource exporters, which means they'll be badly hurt by increased trade tension. And EME currencies have declined over the last six months: