Archives: Webinars
急速に変化する外部環境のなか、2026年の事業計画策定では「世界経済を読む力」がこれまで以上に求められています。関税リスクや地政学的リスクの高まり、AI産業の急成長など、従来の社内データや市場データだけでは需要予測の精度に限界が見え始めています。
本ウェビナーでは、2026年の事業計画に直結する世界経済の主要トレンドをわかりやすく解説するとともに、事業計画やサプライチェーンマネジメント(SCM)などに活用できる経済データ活用例をご紹介します。今後、関税リスクが各国、各産業へ与える影響も解説予定です。
世界400名以上のエコノミストを擁するマクロ経済の調査会社である弊社は、世界経済の動きを企業にとって実務的かつ関連性の高いレベルにまで落とし込み、戦略策定や実行につながる知見を提供しています。社内データや市場データとマクロ経済データを組み合わせることで、より包括的で精度の高い需要予測を実現し、2026年の計画立案を強力にサポートします。
Global travel has moderated in recent months but continues to outpace the slowing economic backdrop, despite some heightened uncertainty. Join us as we discuss recent global and regional trends within our latest updated forecasts. We will explain why, and where, we expect travel growth to continue over the remainder of this year and even accelerate in 2026 despite the opposite trend in the economic growth.
The Global Climate Service quantifies the macroeconomic impacts of six climate scenarios against a stated policies baseline. These scenarios help businesses understand the implications of climate change and trade-offs of climate mitigation. This webinar will discuss our new high transition- and high physical risk scenario, ‘Too Little Too Late’. In this scenario, climate change accelerates and policymakers react too late to significantly bring down temperatures. Warming is well above 1.5 °C by 2060. The world fails to avoid physical risks and rising carbon prices in a carbon-intensive economy lead to persistent inflationary pressures.
As we approach Q4 and many investors begin to refresh their capital markets assumptions, Oxford Economics invites you to an exclusive 45-minute virtual event where we’ll unveil our newly developed Capital Markets Assumptions (CMA) Tool — a powerful, flexible solution designed to help financial institutions navigate long-term asset return forecasting with greater confidence and clarity.
The economy is holding up even as unemployment keeps rising. Is the Fed rate cut the first of many or “one and done”? Will the dollar buckle under Fed easing, or benefit from greater weakness abroad? And where are the global fixed income and currency opportunities? Finally, is the stock market vulnerable after the recent runup? Join David and Harvinder for a live webcast as they tackle these questions and more.
Tourism Economics will reflect on the latest travel performance in Europe during the summer and highlight key trends that have emerged. This will be supported by further insights from MMGY-TCI research, focusing on traveller sentiment over the past year. In addition, Tourism Economics will outline several important findings to come out of their latest surveys and how they could shape European travel demand going into 2026.
In this webinar we look at the extent to which the investment in AI has supported US and global economic activity over recent quarters and the degree to which this support is likely to continue into 2026. We also look at potential catalysts for the boom turning to bust and the likely spillovers to the broader economy that this would entail.
In this interactive webinar, we’ll discuss best practices, typical challenges, and suggested approaches for using economic data to forecast demand and sales across a range of sectors. Business planning, analytics, and strategy teams will benefit from our insights on how to best use macroeconomic data to improve the accuracy of sales forecasts and what common pitfalls to avoid.
In our recent Made in America research series, we explored key trends at a macro, sectoral and regional level as to the potential for US reshoring, and what it means for business and policy makers. Join the authors of the series as they discuss their findings and key conclusions for US manufacturing over the next decade.
In this instalment of our Eurozone research webinar series, we will present our recent research on fiscal positions of various countries in the Eurozone and our assessment of the macroeconomic impact of the various fiscal policy packages, including the ongoing European defence spending drive to meet the new NATO spending targets.
Risks are swirling around the economy and this has caused the Federal Open Market Committee to become divided about the course of monetary policy next year. Angst about the labor market are being prioritized by the Fed over inflation, for now. Monetary policy is a blunt instrument and it can’t address less labor supply that could be amplified by recent policy changes. Downside risks to labor market have become more threatening as the pass-through to consumer prices from tariffs is likely to intensify. On the upside, the economy will continue to reap the benefits of AI-related investment that shows no sign of slowing down.
Join Oxford Economics to uncover the opportunities and risks shaping global technology investment in 2025. We’ll explore:
• What threats could derail enterprise tech spending?
• Which markets and industries are best placed to drive growth?
• How will AI and cloud adoption reshape strategies for the year ahead?
he UK economy remains exceptionally fragile; subdued growth, high inflation, and a weak fiscal position are set to persist, and a sustainable driver of UK growth has yet to emerge. The Budget on November 26 could add to the headwinds, with further substantial tightening of fiscal policy likely. In this panel discussion, Andrew Goodwin, Michael Saunders, and Liam Sides will discuss the causes of the UK’s macroeconomic and regional problems and assess whether the government has the solutions.
We will explore the key economic drivers beyond GDP, including private consumption, inflation, earnings, and disposable income, among others, and explain why they matter for consumer markets. The session will also cover common challenges such as irregular periods and limited data histories, and share anonymised case studies showing how these can be addressed while balancing statistical accuracy with economic logic.