European Equities: A Busy Economic Calendar and Geopolitics to Drive the Majors

In This Article:

Economic Calendar:

Wednesday, 30th September

German Retail Sales (MoM) (Aug)

French Consumer Spending (MoM) (Aug)

French CPI (MoM) September Prelim

French HICP (MoM) September Prelim

German Unemployment Change (Sep)

German Unemployment Rate (Sep)

Italian CPI (MoM) September Prelim

Eurozone Core CPI (YoY) September Prelim

Eurozone CPI (YoY) September Prelim

Thursday, 1st October

Spanish Manufacturing PMI (Sep)

Italian Manufacturing PMI (Sep)

French Manufacturing PMI (Sep) Final

German Manufacturing PMI (Sep) Final

Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Sep) Final

Eurozone Unemployment Rate (Aug)

EU Leaders Summit

The Majors

It was a relatively bearish day for the European majors on Tuesday. Following Monday’s breakout, investors locked in profits ahead of a hectic Wednesday.

Uncertainty ahead of the 1st presidential debate had the majors on the defensive. The debate is scheduled to take place in the early hours of Wednesday morning, European time. Adding to the market angst on the day was the resumption of Brexit negotiations. Ahead of talks, both sides remained some way off from an agreement.

Economic data from the Eurozone had a muted impact, with inflation figures from Germany and Spain sending mixed signals.

While caution was the name of the game, news of progress towards the stalled COVID-19 relief Bill had limited the downside.

On Tuesday, the EuroStoxx600 fell by 0.52% to lead the way down. The CAC40 and DAX30 weren’t far behind, with losses of 0.23% and 0.35% respectively.

The Stats

It was a relatively quiet day on the Eurozone economic calendar. Key stats included September’s prelim inflation figures for Germany and Spain.

Spain

According to prelim figures, Spain saw deflationary pressures ease marginally in September. Consumer prices fell by 0.4%, year-on-year, following a 0.5% decline in August. Economists had forecast a decline of 0.5%.

By contrast, the harmonized consumer price index fell by 0.6%, following a 0.6% decline in August. Economists had forecast a 0.5% fall.

Germany

German consumer prices fell by 0.2% in September, month-on-month, following a 0.1% decline in August. Economists had forecast a 0.1% decline.

According to Destatis,

  • Year-on-year, consumer prices fell by 0.2% after having stalled in August. Economists had forecasted a 0.1% decline.

The Eurozone

From the Eurozone, the consumer confidence indicator came in at -13.9 according to finalized figures. This was in line with prelim and forecasts. In August, the indicator had stood at -14.7.

From the U.S

It was a busier day on the economic calendar, with the stats preceding the first of the 2020 presidential debates.