In this week’s edition:
· US Stocks Decline Amid Escalating Trade Tensions, While European Markets See Mixed Performance
· Gold Rebounds with 4.80% Weekly Gain as Trade Tensions and Weak US Fiscal Outlook Drive Safe-Haven Demand
· Ghana’s Treasury Auction Oversubscribed by 7.63%, Though Yields Continue to Decline Across the Curve
· MTNGH Drives Sharpest Weekly Market Pullback in Four Years; GSE-CI Falls to 29.97% YTD, Financial Stocks Index Up to 33.37%
Kindly click to view the full report: Global Market Update - May 26, 2025
AROUND THE GLOBE
· US Manufacturing Activity Rebounds Sharply in May
o The S&P Global Flash US Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.3 in May 2025, the highest since February and beating expectations. The uptick reflected renewed production growth and a 15-month high in new orders. Inventory buildup and longer delivery times boosted the index, though employment declined again. Selling prices and input costs also surged at the fastest pace in over 18 months.
· US New Home Sales Surge in April
o Sales of new single-family homes in the US jumped 10.9% in April 2025 to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 743,000 units, beating expectations and hitting the highest level since February 2022. Strong gains were seen in the South and Midwest, while the Northeast declined. The median home price rose 0.8% to $407,200, with inventory at 8.1 months’ supply.
· Eurozone Private Sector Activity Contracts in May
o The Eurozone Composite PMI dropped to 49.5 in May 2025 from 50.4 in April, marking the first private sector contraction this year and missing expectations of 50.7. Services declined to 48.9, while factory activity eased its fall to 49.4, the softest contraction in nearly three years. New orders fell amid tariff concerns, with business confidence hitting a 19-month low.
· UK Private Sector Activity Contracts for Second Month in May
o The S&P Global UK Composite PMI edged up to 49.4 in May 2025 from 48.5 in April but remained below 50, signaling a second consecutive month of private sector contraction. Manufacturing activity fell sharply to 45.1, the worst in 19 months, while services saw a slight rebound. New orders dropped to a 2.5-year low amid rising global uncertainty and tariffs. Rising costs and weak demand led to the fastest job cuts in factories in five years.
· Canadian Retail Sales Continue Upward Trend
o Canadian retail sales likely rose 0.5% month-on-month in April 2025, following a revised 0.8% gain in March to C$69.8 billion—the strongest growth this year. Gains were broad-based, led by motor vehicles and parts (+4.8%), clothing (+2.6%), furniture and electronics (+2.1%), and building materials (+2.6%). Gasoline and food retail sales declined amid lower prices.
· Japan Inflation Steady at 3.6% in April
o Japan’s annual inflation held steady at 3.6% in April 2025, the lowest since December. Food price growth eased despite rice costs surging 94.8% year-on-year. Inflation moderated for clothing and education but rose for energy and services as subsidies tapered off. Core inflation climbed to a 27-month high of 3.5%, while monthly CPI increased 0.1%.
GHANA
· BoG Holds Policy Rate Steady at 28%
o The Bank of Ghana (BoG) maintained its policy rate at 28% during its latest meeting, signaling a continued focus on controlling inflation and stabilizing the cedi. The decision reflects cautious monetary policy amid ongoing economic challenges, aiming to balance growth support with price stability in the near term.
· IMF to Disburse $360 Million to Ghana in June 2025
o The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is poised to release $360 million to Ghana in June 2025, pending approval by the IMF Executive Board on June 3. This disbursement follows a staff-level agreement on the fourth review of Ghana’s $3 billion Extended Credit Facility, supporting ongoing economic stabilization efforts in the country.
AFRICA
· South Africa Building Permits Decline 6.7% in March
o The value of building plans approved in South Africa dropped 6.7% year-on-year to ZAR 7.29 billion in March 2025. Non-residential permits led the decline, falling 17.3%, with shopping space down 21% and other structures plunging 46.5%. Approvals for additions dropped 8%, while residential permits saw a slight 0.7% decrease.
· Kenyan Banks Intensify Auctions as Bad Loans Reach Sh717 Billion
o Kenyan banks have stepped up auctioning of assets to recover rising non-performing loans, which have surged to Sh717 billion. The increase in bad debts reflects growing credit risk amid economic challenges. Lenders are increasingly relying on asset sales to manage loan defaults and shore up balance sheets as the banking sector faces mounting pressure.
· Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics