Experts remain pessimistic about the Swiss economic outlook

Published: Wednesday, Oct 30th 2024, 11:20

Back to Live Feed

According to financial analysts and economists, the outlook for the economic situation in Switzerland remains bleak. Although they assessed the prospects for the local economy in October as slightly better than a month ago, the index calculated by the major bank UBS remains in the red.

The UBS CFA indicator, which summarizes the expectations of financial analysts and economists regarding the economy over the next six months, rose by 1.1 points to -7.7 points in October compared to the previous month. However, it remains in negative territory for the fifth month in a row, UBS explained in a press release on Wednesday.

According to UBS, the survey therefore continues to paint a slightly negative outlook for the Swiss economy over the next six months. A deterioration in the economic situation is also expected in the eurozone and the USA. However, the assessment of the current situation in the USA is much more positive, which puts the expected slowdown there into perspective.

The Chinese economy, on the other hand, appears in a new light: analysts have raised their previously pessimistic growth outlook for the Middle Kingdom. According to UBS, this is probably due to the comprehensive economic stimulus package announced by the central bank and the government.

However, if Donald Trump is elected US president, Chinese exports to the US could face significantly higher tariffs, UBS experts warn. This could have a negative impact on the country's growth outlook.

Decline in interest rates expected

Interest rate expectations have also fallen. For Switzerland, for example, a majority of participants in the survey now expect inflation to fall below the one percent mark in 2025. Short-term interest rates in the eurozone and the USA will also fall according to 85% of the analysts surveyed.

However, opinions are divided when it comes to exchange rates. A third of analysts expect the Swiss franc to appreciate against both the euro and the US dollar. This is less than in September. Conversely, around 20 percent expected the Swiss franc to depreciate against both currencies.

The survey was conducted between September 17 and 24 and 26 analysts from the Swiss financial sector took part.

©Keystone/SDA

Related Stories

Stay in Touch

Noteworthy

the swiss times
A production of UltraSwiss AG, 6340 Baar, Switzerland
Copyright © 2024 UltraSwiss AG 2024 All rights reserved