* Citi surprise index in positive territory for over a
year
* Streak doesn't yet reflect impact of war, oil price
surge
By Alun John and Dhara Ranasinghe
LONDON, March 19 (Reuters) - Global economic growth has
continued to outperform expectations for 14 straight months -
just as the war in Iran fuels fresh concerns about energy prices
and global stability - putting the world economy on track for
its longest run of upside surprises since the 2008-09 financial
crisis.
Citi's popular economic surprise metric, which measures how
economic data in the prior three months differs from consensus
forecasts, has been in positive territory since January 2025,
suggesting that economists overestimated hits from geopolitical
turmoil and U.S. tariff hikes.
On Thursday it is set to overtake its post-Covid-19 streak,
making this its second longest on record, behind the 2009-2011
period.
The index does not yet reflect the impact of the war in the
Middle East, which has pushed oil prices up and renewed growth
worries and will take time to feed into economic data.
"There is no reason for it to be consistently positive,
surprises are normally pretty random, and expectations should
adjust to past surprises," said Kristjan Kasikov, global head of
Citi FX Quant Investor Solutions.
"The fact that this has not happened over the past year,
means economists have been too stubborn in not adjusting their
expectations for better than expected growth," said Kasikov, who
created the index 20 years ago.
"They expected the fallout from trade uncertainty and
geopolitics to weigh on growth, and that did not happen."
He said export and industrial production figures had been
particular contributors to the outperformance.
U.S. President Donald Trump announced a series of tariffs
on U.S. imports early in 2025. While they have been reduced from
the highest levels, which shocked markets when they were
announced in April, they remain relatively high.
Massive investment in artificial intelligence and an
expansionary fiscal policy from many governments have bolstered
growth.
Still, analysts expect the oil price surge to weigh in the
months ahead, especially if higher costs spark a broader surge
in inflation and force central banks to raise interest rates.
Kasikov said for most of 2025 data showed global growth was
decelerating, but by less than economists had expected. In the
fourth quarter this shifted and growth indicators began to
accelerate, and by more than expectations.
He also said this could explain why global equities
performed well in 2025.
The MSCI all country world index rose 20.6% last year.