MacroVar analyses the economic and financial conditions of the largest 35 economies in the world by monitoring 40 economic and financial indicators for each country.
However, a quick way to gauge a country’s financial and economic conditions is presented below. Click here to explore how to analyze a country’s economy and financial markets in detail.
Country Economic, Financial & Risk Snapshot
To get a snapshot of your country’s economic health, the most important macroeconomic and financial indicators are the country’s 1. Manufacturing and Services PMI and 2. The performance of the stock market, bonds and currency.
Healthy economic conditions are characterized by growing Manufacturing and Services PMI, good stock market, bond, and currency performance. Another important indicator is the country’s real estate market conditions.
Explore the simple macrovar models used for estimating the trend and momentum for each financial and economic indicator analyzed.
To analyse a specific country for trading or investing in detail, click here to explore the advanced set of macro and financial indicators need to be analysed.
US Markets | Close | Trend | Momentum | YoY % |
S&P 500 | 1245.23 | 75% | 50% | 12% |
US 10-year Treasury | 0.50% | -50% | 100% | 5% |
US Dollar Index | 90.12 | 100% | 0% | 3.4% |
US Real Estate Index | 120.12 | 40% | -50% | -2% |
US Economy | ||||
Manufacturng PMI | 52.40 | Up | 10% | |
Services PMI | 45.60 | Up | 5% | |
Consumer Confidence Index | 90.23 | Up | -1% |
Macroeconomics analyses the performance of a nation's overall economy using macroeconomic indicators like GDP, inflation, unemployment and Government Debt. This section analyses applied macroeconomics used by investors and traders to predict the global economy and countries’ economic and financial markets.
This guide is based to a large extend on the great work of one of the best fund managers and economists in the world, the found of Bridgewater Associated Ray Dalio. You can find a detailed analysis of most section of the guide in his book Big Debt Crises
An economy is the sum of the transactions that make it up. A country’s economy is comprised of the public and private sector. The private sector is comprised of businesses and consumers. There are two types of businesses manufacturing, and services. A country’s economy is also affected by the global economy since capital and products flow between countries.
Economic Aim: A nation’s economy is healthy when there is real economic growth combined with steady inflation, low unemployment, and low debt.
Economic Growth
Economic growth is measured by GDP (Gross Domestic Product). There are two forms of GDP monitored. Nominal GDP and Real GDP. Nominal GDP is the total income of a country in a year. Real GDP is the total income of a country adjusted for inflation.
Inflation
Inflation (commonly measured by the country’s CPI) measures the rate of increase of the average prices of goods and services in an economy. When prices rise the purchasing power of money falls and vice-versa. Policymakers target an inflation rate of 2% which is considered healthy. Zero or negative inflation rates and high inflation rates of 4-5% are damaging for the economy. Hence policymakers react using monetary and fiscal policies. Learn more about the types and positive and negative effects of inflation.
Economic activity is driven by 1. Productivity growth (GDP growth 2% per year due knowledge increase), 2. the Long-term debt cycle (50-75 years), 3. the business cycle (5-8 years).
Credit (promise to pay) is driven by the debt cycle. If credit is used to purchase productive resources, it helps economic growth and income. If credit is used for consumption it has no added value (version 2 expand on this)
These factors cause economic cycles which has the following stages: 1. Expansion, 2. Peak, 3. Recession, 4. Depression, 5. Trough, 6. Recovery. Explore the macroeconomic cycle in detail.
Sources of Funds: Economic transactions are filled with either money, credit (promise to pay) or income. These sources of funds either go into spending, financial markets or residual as savings. Depending on the flow of sources, financial markets and the economy can grow in sync or be disconnected. When the central bank injects money into the system, they normally go to financial markets whereas credit tends to go into spending. The availability of money and credit is determined by the country’s central bank using different tools. The degree to which debt is healthy for the economy depends on whether borrowed money is used productively to generate sufficient income to service the debt or not.
Country versus Rest of the World: A country’s finances consist of a simple income statement (revenue–expenses) and a balance sheet (assets–liabilities). Exports are imports are the main revenue and expense for countries. Uncompetitive economies have negative net income (imports higher than exports), which is financed by either savings (FX & Gold reserves) or rising debt (owed to exporters).Debt: A nation’s debt is categorized as local currency debt and FX debt. Local debt is manageable since a country’s central bank can print money and repay it. FX debt is controlled by foreign central banks hence it is difficult to be repaid. For example. Turkey has US dollar denominated debt. Only the US central bank (the Federal Reserve), can print US dollars hence FX debt is out of Turkey’s control.
A country can control its debt by either: 1. Inflate it away, 2. Restructure, 3. Default. The US aims to keep nominal GDP growth above interest rates (kept low) to gradually reduce its debt.
A nation’s economy is constantly changing and is affected by the country’s macroeconomic dynamics and its economic performance relative to the rest of the World (RoW).
The country’s policymakers (government and central bank) monitor economic conditions and use fiscal policy and monetary policy to control economic growth and inflation.
During recessions and depressions policymakers inject liquidity in the financial system to make new borrowing and repaying of existing debt easier. Conversely, during strong economic expansions accompanied with rising inflation, policymakers withdraw liquidity from the financial system to slowdown new debt and credit and reduce aggregate demand.
The diagram below shows what is the policy followed during four economic environments of inflation versus economic growth.
Monetary Policy & Fiscal Policy
Policy makers have the following tools to affect economic growth and inflation:
Monetary Policies (MP)
Fiscal Policies (FP)
Expansionary FP is when government spends more than tax received to boost economic growth. This is financed by issuing new debt financed by 1. domestic or foreign investors or 2. CB money printing.
The degree of economic intervention depends on the country’s economic fundamentals, its currency status and credibility. Countries with reserve currencies or strong fundamentals are allowed by markets to intervene. However, when nations with weak economic fundamentals intervene heavily, confidence is lost, causing a capital flight out of the country, spiking inflation and interest rates which lead to a severe recession, political and social crisis.
Investors aim to generate positive real returns and avoid capital losses. If for example, an investor purchases a government bond having a return of 4% but the inflation rate is 5% then the investor’s real return is -1%. Alternatively, if an investor purchases a Turkish government bond to get a 5% return but the Turkish lira depreciates by 18% then the investor’s real return is -13%.
Policymakers must use these tools diligently to boost economic growth while maintaining capital markets’ faith in the country’s economy. Unreliable countries with weak economic fundamentals have limited capacity to use MP and FP to boost economic activity. If their policymakers use aggressive MP and FP they will trigger a loss of confidence in their country, which will lead to capital outflows, a severe currency depreciation, spiking inflation, loss of consumer and business confidence and a destroyed economy.
Reserve vs Non-reserve currencies: Reserve currencies are used by countries and corporations to borrow funds, store wealth and for international transactions (buy commodities). They are considered low risk. The US dollar is the world’s largest reserve currency. The main advantage of reserve currency nations is their ability to borrow (issue debt) on their own currency. These countries have increased power to conduct monetary and fiscal policies to boost their economies. However, prolonged expansionary fiscal and monetary policies eventually lead to loss of confidence in these currencies as a store of value and potential inflationary crisis.
Non-reserve currency countries: Conversely, developing nations are not considered low risk hence their ability to borrow in their own currencies is limited. Their economic growth is dependent on foreign capital inflows denominated in foreign currencies like the US dollar. During periods of global economic growth, capital flows from developed markets into developing nations looking for higher returns. These economies and their corporations’ issue foreign debt to grow. However, during periods of weak global economic growth or financial stress, foreign capital flows (also called capital flight) back to developed countries causing an inability of countries and companies to repay their debt. Central banks gather foreign exchange reserves during growth periods to create a cushion against capital outflows.
Global Growth, Risk and Capital flows: Capital flows between low and high-risk countries and financial assets depending on global economic and risk conditions. During periods of global growth, capital flows from low-risk economies and markets to riskier markets looking for higher returns. Conversely, economic recessions and elevated global risk pushes capital back to safe countries and financial assets.
A nation’s economy is vulnerable to economic weakness or financial stress and has limited ability to use monetary and fiscal policy tools when it experiences:
Initially a developed economy has stable inflation and GDP growth, is competitive, has low Debt and Debt/GDP grows slower than Income/GDP. Emerging countries experience foreign capital inflows, domestic liquidity is robust keeping interest rates low, balance of payments is positive and the country’s currency, stocks, bonds generate positive total returns. The central bank has two options: 1. print money, buy FX reserves and keep the currency stable or 2. Let the currency appreciate.
Growth Phase
Economic growth and inflation accelerate driven by rising debt and credit availability. Rising incomes lead to rising asset prices which lead to rising debt growth. Debt/GDP rises faster than Income/GDP. Emerging markets experience a bubble triggered by high foreign capital flows and rising Debt/GDP. Country’s competitivness falls while economic growth is strong supported by consumption driven by rising domestic and foreign debt. The country’s current account deteriorates while the currency, stocks, bonds rise for a period of 5-10 years.
Cycle Peak
After a prolonged economic growth period growth and inflation is high and financial markets are overpriced and ready for a bear market. The peak is often triggered by liquidity tightening caused by either 1. central bank raising rates to control inflation or 2. foreign capital outflows. Emerging markets experience an inflationary depression and/or political crisis since foreign capital outflows cause interest rates and inflation to rise and economic growth to collapse. The central bank intervenes in the FX market to defend the currency using its FX reserves and raises short-term rates to prevent capital flight. The optimum central bank strategy is a big one-off devaluation to avoid FX reserve depletion and a prolonged stagflation.
Recession or Depression
If the economy’s long-term debt cycle is rising, the economy experiences a normal recession with an imbalance between money and debt service. The central bank lowers short-term rates to stimulate the economy through the 1. wealth effect, 2. Rising demand for interest rate sensitive goods, 3. Ease of debt service (reduction of monthly loan payments).
If the economy’s long-term debt cycle has rolled over, the economy faces a depression. Debt levels have reached a plateau and cannot rise further relative to incomes. The only solution is to reduce debt burdens and debt service to achieve an economic recovery. The deleveraging (debt reduction) starts with rising defaults and austerity to repay debts. Debtors are pushed to sell their assets to raise cash since they have insufficient income and are unable to borrow. Borrowers creditworthiness deteriorates since debt/income and debt/net-worth ratios rise.
The central bank reduces short-term rates to zero, but this is insufficient to stimulate the economy. The second monetary policy tool used is to print money and buy long-term government bonds to lower long-term rates and force investors make riskier investments and bring economic recovery. This works when risk premiums are high but has a diminishing effect. Governments 1. encourage credit creation, 2. ease rules to help debtors’ services their debt, 3. print and spend money to buy goods, services, and financial assets.
The third monetary policy tool is money printing and boost of aggregate demand by either 1. Debt financed fiscal spending (treasury issues new debt, the central bank buys this debt with printed money), and/or 2. Cash transfers to households.
Emerging markets face an economic depression after foreign capital outflows. The currency is devalued causing foreign debt to explode, GDP to fall and unemployment to rise. The current account improves since imports fall while exports rise. Stocks fall 50% in local terms, while the currency loses 30%. Short-term rates rise, the yield curve inverts, and printing is limited. Inflation picks up and the country needs IMF and BIS support to fix it’s foreign exchange imbalances.
Normalization
The central bank and government aim to achieve economic recovery by balancing the deflationary forces of austerity, defaults, redistribution of wealth with the inflationary forces of money printing and currency depreciation to bring nominal growth above nominal interest rates. Normalization takes 5-10 years for the economy to reach prior peak. Debt burdens fall relative to incomes with positive economic growth.
High debt service payments (principal and interest combined) rather than high debt levels cause debt squeezes because cash flows rather than debt levels slow the economy. If interest rates fall enough, debts can increase without debt service payments rising enough to cause a squeeze.
Emerging markets normalization occurs when the FX market is stable after devaluation (undervalued -10% on PPP), inflation is falling and stable, trade balance is good, financial assets generate positive total returns, the yield curve is normalized with low domestic interest rates and high long rates. The country is competitive to grow again attracting foreign capital flows.
Note: if a developed country with a reserve currency keeps inflation high to keep growth strong by using expansionary fiscal and monetary policies it will eventually erode its reserve currency as store of wealth and convert a deflationary crisis to an inflationary crisis.
MacroVar database holds historical data of more than x macroeconomic indicators for the largest 35 countries in the world.
A country’s macroeconomy is analysed using the indicators below.
Get a snapshot of a country’s economy using:
To further analyze a country’s macroeconomy, the following parameters must be closely monitored:
Which countries succeed or fail
A country’s success is determined by three factors: 1. Productivity: producing more by working harder or smarter, 2. Culture: Sacrificing life for achievement, innovation, commercialism, low bureaucracy, corruption, rule of law, 3. Indebtedness: low debt to income.
Ray Dalio has analysed extensively all the factors determining a country's economic success. Click here to read this paper.