European Equities: A Lack of Stats Leaves the ECB and Fiscal Policy in Focus

In This Article:

Economic Calendar:

Friday, 6th March

German Factory Orders (MoM) (Jan)

The Majors

It was another bullish day for the European majors on Wednesday, with the EuroStoxx600 rising by 1.36% to lead the way. The CAC40 and DAX30 weren’t far behind with gains of 1.33% and 1.19% respectively.

Support continued to kick on anticipation of both monetary and fiscal policy support to combat the effects of the coronavirus.

The upside was far from spectacular, however, as questions remain over whether monetary policy will be able to provide support.

The Stats

It was a busy day on the Eurozone economic calendar on Wednesday. Economic data included Service PMI numbers out of Italy and Spain and retail sales figures for Germany and the Eurozone.

There were also finalized service and composite PMI numbers out of France, Germany, and the Eurozone.

According to the February PMI surveys,

Spain: Service sector activity grew at a marginally slower pace, with the PMI falling from 52.3 to 52.1.

Italy: Activity picked up in the services sector, with the PMI rising from 51.4 to 52.1.

France: The finalized Services PMI was revised down from 52.6 to 52.5. In January, the PMI had stood at 51.1.

Germany: Service sector activity grew at a slower pace in February. The finalized PMI was revised down from 53.3 to 52.5. In January, the PMI had stood at 54.2.

The Eurozone’s Services PMI was revised down from 52.8 to 52.6. In January, the PMI had stood at 52.5. In spite of the downward revision, the finalized composite PMI held steady at a 6-month high 51.6, up from a January 51.3.

According to the February Composite Survey,

  • Support came from a pickup in service sector activity and a weaker contraction in the manufacturing sector.

  • Levels of new business increased for the 3rd month in a row, though new export orders continued to contract.

  • Staffing levels continued to rise, with a modest rate of increase unchanged from January.

  • Backlogs of outstanding work fell for a 12th consecutive month.

  • Input prices were on the rise, driven by staffing costs in the services sector, while output costs saw a marginal increase.

  • Optimism eased back from January’s 16-month high in February, with concerns over the coronavirus weighing.

At country level

  • All member states saw expansion. Ireland comfortably topped the table with a 17-month high 56.7.

  • Growth in France and Spain remained solid, as both composites hit 2-month highs.

  • Weakness in the manufacturing sector, however, weighed on both Germany and Italy.

  • Germany’s composite fell to a 2-month low 50.7, while Italy’s fell to a 4-month low 50.7.