European Equities: Can the Majors Continue to Defy Gravity? Plenty Can Go Wrong…

In This Article:

Economic Calendar:

Tuesday, 7th July

German Industrial Production (MoM) (May)

Wednesday, 8th July

EU Economic Forecasts

Thursday, 9th July

German Trade Balance (May)

The Majors

It was a bullish start to the week for the European majors, with the bullish chatter across China’s state-controlled media driving risk appetite early on.

The DAX30 rose by 1.64%, with the CAC40 and EuroStoxx600 seeing gains of 1.49% and 1.58% respectively.

News had hit the wires in the early part of the day of a reported priority to foster a “healthy” bull market.

The news allowed the markets to once more cast aside negative COVID-19 news to deliver support for riskier assets. Even rising tension between the U.S and China over the last week was not enough to pin back risk appetite.

Economic data certainly contributed to the upside on the day, with stats from the Eurozone and the U.S impressing.

From last week, news of the conditional approval for the use of antiviral drug remdesivir in the EU was also taken as positive by the markets. The approval came ahead of a record-high number of COVID-19 cases from the weekend.

The Stats

It was a relatively busy day on the Eurozone economic calendar on Monday. Key stats included Germany’s factory orders and the Eurozone’s retail sales figures for May. From Germany, June’s construction PMI was also in focus.

According to Destatis, factory orders rose by 10.4% in May, partially reversing a revised 26.2% tumble in April. Economists had forecast a 15% rise.

  • Domestic orders increased by 12.3% and foreign orders by 8.8%, month-on-month.

  • New orders from the euro area went up 20.9%, with new orders from other countries increasing by 2.0%.

  • Manufacturers of intermediate goods saw new orders increase by 0.4%, with manufacturers of capital goods seeing an increase of 20.3%.

  • Consumer goods new orders increased by 4.7%.

  • New orders in the automotive industry saw a marked increase, though remained more than 47% lower than in February 2020.

In June, Germany’s Construction PMI rose from 40.1 to 41.3 in June.

From the Eurozone, retail sales jumped by 17.8% in May, coming in ahead of a forecasted 15% increase. In April, retail sales had slumped by 12.1%.

According to Eurostat,

  • The volume of retail trade increased by 38.4% for automotive fuels, by 34.5% for non-food products, and by 2.2% for food, drinks, and tobacco.

  • Luxembourg (+28.6%), France (+25.6%), and Austria (+23.3%) registered the largest increases in May.

From the U.S

It was a relatively busy day on the economic calendar, with June’s ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI in focus.