Friday, September 17, 2010

The economic data in Europe at present is certainly indicating a relatively sharp slowdown from the strong growth levels achieved during Q2. Europe appears to be following a similar path to that of the US and after an initial growth spurt driven on by inventory replacement and for Europe a favourable currency movement earlier in the year, we are now starting to see growth return back to sub trend. In the UK yesterday we had further confirmation of this trend with the poor retail sales data for August which declined by -0.5% compared to consensus expectations of a +0.3% improvement.


In Europe today we have had the German Producer Price Index for August which was unchanged month on month compared to expectations of a +0.3% increase. The year on year rate fell from +3.7% to +3.2%.

The main data for announcement in the US today is the CPI data for August with the consensus looking for a +0.3% increase in the headline rate whilst the core rate (excluding food and energy) is expected to show a more modest +0.1% improvement. The main possible market moving event of the day will be the publication of the US University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey for September. The consensus is looking for a modest improvement to around 70.0 from the previous reported level of 68.9 and any miss could well place markets under pressure this afternoon.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

The economic data in the US this afternoon has once again provided very little to get excited about. As with yesterday it was not sufficiently bad to create a sell off but also not good enough to create the foundation for a rally. We are in a situation in which the market is now struggling for direction and it is unclear as to where the next significant move will be.


The US weekly initial jobless claims came in at 450,000 which were broadly in line with expectations and there will be some relief that the figure did not increase on last week’s level of 450,000. However, it should still be remembered that claims remain at elevated levels.

The Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index just failed to make it into positive territory with a decline of -0.7 compared to the previous reported level of -7.7 and consensus expectations of an improvement to 3.8.

Other US data published today was the Producer Price Index for August. The headline rate showed a +0.4% month on month improvement whilst the core rate (excluding food and energy) showed a more modest improvement of +0.1% month on month. Overall there is still little in the way of inflationary pressure in the US economy and we should get confirmation of this tomorrow with the publication of the August CPI.

Tomorrow in Europe the German Producer Price Index for August is due for publication and in the US apart from the CPI we also get the next reading for the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment for September. The last reading was 68.9 and the consensus is expecting an increase to around 70.0.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The US data today has not provided any reason for major disappointment but at the same time there is little reason for optimism. The Empire State Manufacturing Index came in at 4.14 compared to consensus expectations of 5.0. The new orders element of the index moved back into positive territory from the -2.7 reported last time to +4.3 whilst the employment element remained relatively static at 14.9. Whilst this report only covers New York State it is clear that the manufacturing sector in the US has slowed down considerably during recent weeks. Tomorrow the report for Philadelphia is due for publication. This index declined last month to -7.7 indicating contraction and the consensus is looking for an improvement during September to around +4.0.


Other data that has been published in the US today is Industrial Production for August which was in line with expectations with a +0.2% month on month improvement. The July figure was revised down a little to +0.6% from +1.0%.

UK unemployment published today for the 3 months to July fell by 8,000 to 2.47 million which was less than what analysts had expected. There is no major economic data due for announcement in Europe today.

Tomorrow the initial weekly jobless claims will be in focus in the US. After the partially estimated reading last week analysts will be keen to see what this week holds. The consensus is looking for a number around the 450,000 mark. Other data due out in the US tomorrow is the Producer Price Index for August. In the UK retail sales for August will be published tomorrow with the consensus looking for +0.3%.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The UK CPI not unexpectedly remained unchanged year on year at 3.1% due to the impact of higher food and clothing prices. The core rate which excludes food and energy actually increased year on year from +2.6% to +2.8%. There is still a good deal of uncertainty as to where prices are going short term although most continue to expect a gradual decline. The impact of the VAT hike at the beginning of next year may well delay further a move in the CPI to closer to the Bank of England targeted rate of 2%.


This morning we have had further evidence of slowdown in Europe with the publication of the German ZEW Economic Sentiment survey for September. The consensus was expecting it to fall to +10.0 from the previous reported level of +14.0. However, the actual number came out at -4.3, substantially below expectations. A negative number indicates that more investors now expect deterioration in economic conditions compared to those that expect conditions to improve.

We have also had Industrial Production numbers for Europe this morning which showed no changed month on month, perhaps again evidence that economic conditions in Europe are slowing down after the strong Q2 growth.

In the US today the much awaited retail sales data for August was a little better than expected. If you strip out the impact of auto sales the gain month on month was +0.6% compared o expectations of +0.3%. The back-to-school season will have no doubt played a part in the strength last month but once again the data is good enough at least to suggest that a recession is not imminent.

Look out tomorrow for the US Empire State Manufacturing Index for September. The market will want to see this number remaining in positive territory and further confirmation that the manufacturing sector is not falling off a cliff will be well received. A negative number will be taken badly especially given the more recent rally on the back of the better than expected ISM data.

Monday, September 13, 2010

The economic data is again likely to drive the market this week. World markets have opened in good shape this morning following completion of the Basel III agreement on minimum capital ratios. The required amounts are towards the lower end of expectations and are seen as achievable by most European banks which is why the sector has rallied this morning. We have also had Chinese Industrial Production numbers for August which was up 13.9% year on year, a little ahead of expectations and this has also helped sentiment this morning.


We have noticed that some brokers have started to tweak up their estimates for US Q3 GDP following the better than expected trade data for the US last week. Estimates are now closing in on +2%.

There is plenty in the economic calendar this week although today there is relatively little to focus on. The week really kicks off tomorrow with the publication of US retail sales for August. The consensus is looking for a +0.3% month on month improvement. The other US data due for publication tomorrow is business inventories for July with a +0.6% month on month gain expected.

In Europe, Tuesday brings the German ZEW Economic sentiment index for September. Expectations are for a drop to +10.0 from the previous reported level of +14.0. Given the slowdown indicated in recent data there is downside risk to this number in our view. Tomorrow we also get Eurozone Industrial Production for July with the consensus looking for a +0.2% improvement after the -0.1% drop the previous month. Finally, tomorrow the UK CPI for August is due for publication. The CPI has stayed stubbornly high during recent months and with concerns that food price inflation is starting to tick up there is a real risk that the UK CPI is going to remain well above target for longer than expected.

What will be of significant interest this week will be the two manufacturing reports due for publication in the US. On Wednesday we get the Empire State Manufacturing report for September. This measures manufacturing activity in New York State and this index did improve by 2 points last month to 7.0, but the new orders element fell into negative territory. The market will want to see this index remain in positive territory indicating growth and the consensus is looking for +5.0 for September. A negative number will be taken badly given the concerns over the manufacturing sector, although these were allayed to some extent with the better than expected ISM number at the beginning of the month. The second manufacturing report is for Philadelphia and that is due for publication on Thursday. The index for the previous month did actually decline to -7.7 from +4.1 which indicates contraction. The market is looking for this index to bounce back to around +4.0, but another negative number cannot be ruled out. If we do get gloomy manufacturing reports this week it may well prove to be the catalyst for at least some profit taking after the recent rally.

We will comment more on the rest of the data due out this week in the next Daily Briefing.

Friday, September 03, 2010

The market is awaiting the US employment data and the ISM Non Manufacturing Index this afternoon. After the ISM manufacturing index on Wednesday defied expectations with an increase over the month there has been a sudden shift in sentiment towards the bulls. Expectations for private payroll growth within the nonfarm payrolls currently stand at +40,000 which hasn’t changed since earlier in the week and that’s despite the poor showing from the ADP number on Wednesday. Undoubtedly a negative private payroll number today will be taken badly but anything positive may well be greeted with relief giving the market a further excuse to rally after the market decline in August. The headline nonfarm payroll figure will still be negative as the census workers roll off the register with expectations of a drop of around -100,000.


The ISM Non Manufacturing data due out this afternoon is very important indeed given that it covers around 90% of the US economy. Expectations for July are for a reading of 53.0 from the previous reported level of 54.3. Given recent economic indicators we would certainly expect a decline although we would have said the same of the manufacturing report earlier in the week. There is the potential for a surprise but more likely a modest decline in line with expectations.

Overall a lot rests on the data this afternoon and if at the very least the numbers are no worse than expectations we would expect to see the market continue its rally. However, we would not read too much into this and it is more likely to be short lived. The US recovery is far from out of the woods and Q3 GDP is still lining up to be worse than Q2. Based upon recent data such as the bad construction numbers announced for July and the downward revision to the June number we may yet see a further downward revision to Q2 US GDP and a very low Q3 number with some commentators still suggesting Q3 could be negative.

The European data we have had today is the August Services Purchasing Managers Index for Germany, the EuroZone and the UK. The Eurozone was a little above expectations whilst Germany and the UK showed declines over the month. Euro Zone retail sales have also been published for July and the number was slightly below expectations with a month on month increase of +0.1% compared to expectations of +0.2%.

Thursday, September 02, 2010

The ISM manufacturing report in the US yesterday afternoon changed the market mood completely and all of a sudden there was a rush to buy risky assets pushing world markets up by well over 2%. The ISM reading came in at 56.3 against expectation of a fall to 53.0 from the previous monthly level of 55.5. However, the new orders and unfilled orders element of the index declined to their lowest level in many months. More recent data relating to the US manufacturing industry has pointed to quite a sharp slowdown in activity and it is difficult to see this index making any more progress from here. In fact yesterday’s data was almost a little deceptive in terms of what the underlying picture currently is.


The US ADP private payroll data was dire, bearing in mind that we are supposed to be in a stage of economic recovery. To lose a further 10,000 private payrolls when the US should in fact be creating 100,000+ at this time is not an indication that all is well. Also yesterday, US construction spending for July was announced and this fell by -1.0% compared to expectations of a -0.6% fall. The June level was revised to a decline of -0.8%, which is a reflection of the poor state of the US housing market. However, yesterday the market chose to focus on the positives and we now look to the Non Farm Payrolls and the ISM Non manufacturing data due out tomorrow. If both of these please the market we may well see markets push further ahead over the coming week, but conversely to that we may get a reality check instead.

This afternoon keep an eye out for the US weekly initial jobless claims. After the significant improvement last week to 473,000 from the terrible 504,000 posted the week before the market will at the very least be looking for claims to be hovering around the 470,000 mark. A shift back up towards 500,000 will not be taken well, but if we see further improvement that is likely to give the market a further boost this afternoon. Other data due out in the US today are factory orders for July with the consensus looking for a modest +0.3% gain following the -1.2% drop during the previous month.

In the UK today we have had further confirmation that the housing market is in decline with the Nationwide house price index falling by -0.9% during August. In Europe the estimate for Q2 European GDP was unrevised at 1.0%. The European Central Bank is meeting today to decide on interest rate policy. We can expect no change and realistically any rate increase is unlikely to come until well into 2011.

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

The first of the employment data in the US is due for publication today with the ADP private payrolls for August due shortly. With clear deterioration in the US employment picture during recent weeks expectations have fallen and the consensus is expecting private payrolls to show a figure of just +20,000 last month. This compares to the July number of +42,000. However, there is considerable uncertainty as to what the figure will be today and it is not inconceivable that no private payroll jobs have been created. Either way the ADP number today will give some indication of where the Non Farm Payroll number is heading on Friday.


Today in the US we also get the ISM Manufacturing Index for August. More recent manufacturing data has suggested a rather rapid slowdown in conditions within the US manufacturing sector and the ISM number today will reflect that. The consensus is expecting a figure of 53.0 after 55.5 last month but given the recent weakness there is in our view some downside risk to this number.

Other US data due for publication is construction spending for July with the consensus expecting a drop of -0.6% after the +0.1% gain in June.

In Europe today we have had the August Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index for the Euro zone and Germany which were broadly in line with expectations. The equivalent figure for the UK published today was a little less than expected at 54.3 compared to expectations of 57.0 after the July figure of 56.9. Overall, so far economic activity in Europe and the UK seems to be holding up a lot better than most feared although it is still early days given that the austerity measures and general fiscal squeeze are in the main yet to be felt.

The market is strong today after better than expected manufacturing data in China. The US economic data due out over the next couple of days will be crucial if the momentum is to be maintained.