Thursday, October 25, 2012

Eurozone survey indicators look extremely weak; watch German GfK consumer sentiment at 7 GMT

It is time once again to take a closer look at the latest Eurozone consumer sentiment and business conditions surveys. These measures tend to be leading indicators for the trajectory of corporate earnings and GDP growth.  The first one is the Markit PMI.
Markit: - The Eurozone sank further into decline at the start of the fourth quarter, with the combined output of the manufacturing and service sectors dropping at the fastest rate since June 2009.

The Markit Eurozone PMI® Composite Output Index fell for a third successive month, down from 46.1 in September to 45.8 in October, according to the preliminary ‘flash’ reading based on around 85% of usual monthly replies. Output has fallen continually since September of last year with the exception of a marginal increase in January.

Output continued to fall in response to a further marked contraction in new orders. The rate of decline in new business eased slightly since September, which had seen the largest drop since June 2009.
It is interesting to see the PMI numbers diverging from the GDP - the so-called "soft data" - "hard data" divergence (chart below). It is possible that the actual business conditions are indeed better than the business survey would suggest - it has happened before. But in most cases the divergence was temporary and by the end of the year we should see which was closer to reality.

Source: Markit (click to enlarge)

These weak business surveys are not just driven by the periphery nations. Germany's IFO Institute indicators are showing an unexpectedly worrying trend as well.

Source: IFO Institute (click to enlarge)

Households surveys in the Eurozone paint a similarly bleak picture. The EC consumer confidence (which ticked up slightly), expectations for the economy, and particularly personal finances are all quite weak. In fact the expectation of "own financial situation in the next 12 months" touched the all-time low reached in 2008. Eurozone households have completely lost confidence in the sustainability of their personal finances going forward.

Source: EC, BNP Paribas (click to enlarge)

With such weakness in business and the consumer sectors across the Eurozone, economists now turn to the German GfK consumer sentiment (2AM EST). The number is expected to be stable (expectation is 5.9) but there are clearly risks to the downside.
FT: - A poor week for the German economy will focus more eyes on the latest data from the eurozone heartland, the GfK consumer sentiment index released on Friday.

While stable numbers are expected from the German consumer, caution is the watchword after the surprise this week of the Ifo business confidence gauge hitting two-and-a-half-year lows and German PMI data declining for a sixth straight month. Could Germany become a bigger worry in the eurozone?



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