The UK Budget was as expected met with relative indifference by the market yesterday. With concerns over the nuclear situation in Japan now subsiding and the ongoing military action in Libya seemingly discounted in the oil price (which is relatively static at present albeit at near recent highs), the market focus may again be brought back to the economic data. European markets are currently showing gains of around 1% on the day with the Dow futures currently up around 50 points.
In the US yesterday new home sales data for February was substantially below expectations with a decline to an annualised rate of 250,000 which compared to consensus expectations of 290,000 and the last reported number of 284,000. The US housing market goes from bad to worse and is going to take years to recover.
On the agenda in the US today are durable goods orders for February which is expected to show a +1.5% month on month gain after a +2.7% gain last month. Durable goods data is notoriously volatile and the estimates for the current month are quite broad with some expecting a negative number. Also due for publication this afternoon is the weekly initial jobless claims which according to the consensus is expected to remain at 385,000.
The minutes from the latest Bank of England MPC meeting published yesterday revealed no change in the voting pattern with three member supporting a higher base rate (one for a +0.5% increase and two at +0.25%). Five members voted for no change with Adam Posen in favour of more quantitative easing. The debate over monetary policy in the UK continues to rage but with a weak consumer outlook the argument for maintaining a relaxed policy is very strong. However, inflation continues to dominate the headlines and the pressure is undoubtedly building for action.
UK retail sales data published this morning for February was disappointing with a -0.8% month on month drop. The consensus was expecting a -0.6% decline after the +1.9% increase in January. The retail sector is one area that is likely to remain under pressure for many months to come. After the January increase it looks likely that consumer spending has slowed significantly. This will place further pressure on the GDP number for Q1 which is likely to show a very modest increase at best with an outside chance of another quarter of contraction.
In Europe this morning the Purchasing Managers Index for Services and manufacturing for the Euro zone and Germany has been published. The services index for both increased on the last reported number with a particularly strong performance from Germany whilst manufacturing is showing some signs of slowdown across the region although it remains well into growth territory.