PodcastsBusinessThe Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

Capital Economics
The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics
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184 episodes

  • The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

    Neil Shearing on China’s trillion dollar surplus; Leah Fahy on China's AI race

    16/1/2026 | 35 mins.
    Can you pitch yourself as a responsible global stakeholder at the same time as running a $1.2 trillion trade surplus? That’s China’s big global macro play, and it’s one that Neil Shearing thinks China is going to struggle to pull off. The Group Chief Economist of Capital Economics is on The Weekly Briefing to explain what that mammoth trade imbalance means for advanced and emerging economies in a fracturing global economy, including why some EMs are doing quite well as a result of all of the geoeconomic ructions.
    Also on the show, there’s an awful lot of noise around the race for AI leadership between the US and China, but how to separate out the hype from the reality? China Economist Leah Fahy’s new report sizes up the progress that Chinese AI has made since the launch of DeepSeek a year ago, and the impact that Beijing’s race for tech supremacy will have on the country’s economic outlook.
    Six non-consensus calls for China for 2026
    China’s AI rollout could rival the US
    Drop-In: The shape of the fractured world in 2026
    The economic and market impact of AI
  • The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

    Maduro’s capture | Is the AI productivity boom here?

    09/1/2026 | 27 mins.
    The first trading week of 2026 has been a whirlwind of geopolitical shocks and big economic developments. Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing is back on The Weekly Briefing to break down an historic start to the year, including:
    The Maduro capture: Neil provides much-needed macro and market context behind the news of Nicolás Maduro’s capture in Venezuela.
    AI and US productivity impacts: Whether the "stunning" Q3 US productivity numbers suggest massive AI investments are moving the needle for the US economy – and whether other economies will soon start feeling the benefit.
    The labour market and the Fed: A review of the December payrolls report and what it could mean for the Fed.
    Also on the show: David Oxley and Kieran Tompkins from our Commodities team join us to make sense of a volatile week in the oil market. They discuss the reality behind expectations for a surge in Venezuelan oil flows onto the global market.
  • The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

    Special: Global CRE outlook – Where to find returns in a uniquely weak recovery

    22/12/2025 | 27 mins.
    This recovery in commercial real estate is unique. Across the US, Europe, and Asia, it has been defined by persistent weakness in both investment and prices. On this special episode of The Weekly Briefing, Chief Real Estate Economist Kiran Raichura and Senior Real Estate Economist Amy Wood join David Wilder to discuss whether this weakness will persist through 2026 and where investors can still find outperformance. Kiran and Amy address:
    Why higher-for-longer interest rates remain the primary determinant of returns for most clients.
    What is required to bridge the gap between seller and buyer price expectations.
    Which traditional sectors offer the best returns, and which alternatives will provide significant outperformance.
    Why private credit markets represent the greatest downside risk to commercial real estate in 2026.
    Further reading:
    Key themes for global commercial real estate in 2026
    Global Commercial Property Chartpack (Q4 2025)
  • The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

    Dodgy data, all flavour of rate move and a bubble that will keep inflating (for now)

    19/12/2025 | 31 mins.
    The final major week of the year in macro is in the books. Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing joins The Weekly Briefing to explain why the latest US inflation report should be taken with a “bucketful of salt,” while reviewing the year-end moves from the BoE, BoJ, and ECB. He reviews the latest moves from the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and the ECB, and talks about why a growing Chinese trade surplus has a corresponding deficit that could present a key risk to global macro stability.
    Plus, Deputy Chief Markets Economist Jonas Goltermann discusses one of our most prominent calls for 2026: why, despite recent wobbles, the AI-driven equities bubble will continue to inflate.
  • The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

    Special episode: The World in 2026 – Key drivers, key risks in global macro

    12/12/2025 | 28 mins.
    In this special episode of The Weekly Briefing podcast, Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing and Chief Global Economist Jennifer McKeown outline Capital Economics' expectations for 2026.

    They tackle the key drivers and risks in the year ahead, examining how the AI narrative will unfold, why the US will be a notable outperformer, how much further China’s exporters can take market share and why a new Fed chair probably won’t deliver the rate cuts that Donald Trump wants.
    Learn more:
    The World in 2026 homepage

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About The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

Capital Economics, a world leading provider of macroeconomic insight, presents The Weekly Briefing – the show with all you need to know about what's happening in the global economy and markets. From the Fed's next decision to China's slowdown to moves in equities, bonds and FX, each week, our team of economists take apart the big economic and market stories and highlight the issues that investors should be paying more attention to.
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