Summary United States: Momentum Continues to Slow This week's data show that while the U.S. economy has remained resilient thus far, tighter monetary policy is certainly starting to impact some key sectors. Industrial production regained its footing in September, but there are signs of slower growth ahead, while regional manufacturing surveys support this loss of momentum. Meanwhile, the real estate sector has been significantly affected by rising interest rates, with total housing starts falling 8.1% in September. Peering ahead, the forward-looking Leading Economic Index points to a recession in the coming year. Next week: New Home Sales (Wed), Q3 Real GDP (Thu), Personal Income & Spending (Fri) International: Robust Consumer Inflation, Subdued Consumer Spending This week saw more evidence on the international front of divergent economic trends—with consumer inflation remaining rapid and consumer spending staying subdued. Inflation surprised to the upside in the United Kingdom, Canada and New Zealand. Meanwhile, retail spending data were subdued in the United Kingdom and Canada. For now, rapid inflation remains a greater concern than slower growth for foreign central banks, and we anticipate further monetary tightening in the weeks and months ahead. Next week: U.K. PMIs (Mon), Bank of Canada (Wed), European Central Bank… Read More »Weekly economic and financial commentary