Group 1: US Economic Situation - The US government shutdown began on October 1, 2023, due to unresolved disagreements between the Republican and Democratic parties regarding healthcare subsidies, leading to uncertainty in economic data releases[3] - The ADP employment data for September indicated a decrease of 32,000 jobs, marking the lowest monthly performance since April 2023, which reflects significant impacts from tariff policies on the labor market[3][12] - Despite initial declines, the US dollar index rebounded by 0.8% from October 2 to October 7, reaching approximately 98.5, close to the previous high of 98.55 on September 25[3][12] Group 2: Eurozone and Japan Economic Challenges - The resignation of French Prime Minister Le Maire highlighted fiscal difficulties in the Eurozone, with France aiming to reduce its budget deficit to 4.7% of GDP by 2026 and further to about 3% by 2029[4][15] - The Eurozone's manufacturing PMI fell to 49.8 in September, indicating a contraction, while the US ISM manufacturing PMI showed a recovery, suggesting that the worst impacts of tariff shocks on US production confidence may have passed[4][16][17] - Japan's new Prime Minister, Kishi, is expected to pursue fiscal stimulus and monetary easing, causing the yen to depreciate significantly, with the USD/JPY exchange rate nearing 151, the lowest level since March 2023[5][20][21] Group 3: China's Manufacturing Sector - China's manufacturing PMI rose slightly to 49.8 in September, driven by a rebound in new export orders, although it remained below the expansion threshold of 50[6][23] - The new export orders index increased by 0.6 percentage points to 47.8, indicating a short-term "export rush" amid the ongoing tariff negotiations with the US[6][23] - The production index rose by 1.1 percentage points to 51.9, reflecting improved production expansion, although domestic demand remains weak[6][23][24]
美国政府停摆,美元为何回升?:——国庆中秋假期宏观综述
Huafu Securities·2025-10-08 07:48