Chart 15: Eurozone PMI's point to solid growth Chart 16: Japanese growth expected to accelerate in 2017 60.0 3.0 58.0 —_.._,. 2.0 Forecasts. 56.0 54.0 1.0 52.0 50.0 00 48.0 -1.0 46.0 44.0 2.0 5 2011-2012, 2013) 2014 = 2015 2016 = 2017 400 ———EA Services PM. ——=EA Manufacturing PMI mam Private demand mam Public demand Aug-09 Aug-10 Aug-11 Aug-12 Aug-13 Aug-14 Aug-15 Aug-16 mam Net exports = Real GDP growth %YoY Source: Markit Source: BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research forecasts, CAO It is a decent global growth picture and it is not impossible to imagine it being still better should the US surprise on the upside and the impact on trade from a Trump presidency prove to be modest. It certainly fits with the Peak Deflation theme since this stronger growth is expected to be accompanied by a pick-up in inflation. We have core PCE in the US reaching 1.9% next year in our core scenario. Our headline inflation numbers are higher because of the expected increase in the oil price from our commodity strategists. Indeed with oil expected to reach $60pb (OPEC permitting) headline CPI inflation in the US could push 3%. In the Euro Area we see headline inflation rising to 1.2%, albeit with core inflation only nudging modestly higher. UK inflation is expected to move markedly higher care of the lower pound, again with headline inflation pushing towards 3%. In Japan driven by our more optimistic view of the economy we project core CPI at 1%. Chart 17: BofAML sees GDP accelerating into 2018... Chart 18: ...with inflation picking up too Global GDP growth % mDM GDP growth % mEM GDP growth % @ Global CPI inflation % m= DM CPI inflation % m EM CPI inflation % 42 4y 54 rv ih 3.8 4.4 44 _ ‘uf 38 3 3.2 34 25 24 24 54 17 18 0.7 0.3 2015 2016F 2017F 2018F 2015 2016F 2017F 2018F Source: BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research Source: BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research Politics - does populism strike again, this time in Europe? Few would have predicted both Brexit and a Trump win in 2016. Both had so