European Equities: The Quarter May be Over but the Worst May Have Yet to Come

In This Article:

Economic Calendar:

Wednesday, 1st April

German Retail Sales (MoM) (Feb)

Spanish Manufacturing PMI (Mar)

Italian Manufacturing PMI (Mar)

French Manufacturing PMI (Mar) Final

German Manufacturing PMI (Mar) Final

Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Mar) Final

Eurozone Unemployment Rate (Feb) Final

Thursday, 2nd April

Spanish Unemployment Change

Friday, 3rd April

Spanish Services PMI (Mar)

Italian Services PMI (Mar)

French Services PMI (Mar) Final

German Services PMI (Mar) Final

Eurozone Markit Composite PMI (Mar) Final

Eurozone Services PMI (Mar) Final

Eurozone Retail Sales (MoM) (Feb)

The Majors

The majors were on the move once more on Tuesday. Leading the way was the EuroStoxx600, which rallied by 1.65%, with the CAC40 and DAX30 rising by 0.40% and 1.22% respectively.

For the month of March, the CAC40 led the way down, sliding by 17.2%, with the DAX30 and EuroStoxx600 falling by 16.44% and by 14.80% respectively.

The sell-off through February and March left the EuroStoxx600 down by 23.03%, which was the worst quarter since 2002. It was even worse for the DAX30 and CAC40, which slumped by 25.01% and by 26.46% respectively.

It was a busy day on the economic calendar that managed to distract the markets from the latest coronavirus numbers. Impressive March private sector PMI numbers out of China supported riskier assets ahead of the European open.

The reality remains, however, that the spread of the coronavirus continues and that the global economy is certainly not out of the woods.

According to the latest coronavirus figures, the total number of cases in the U.S rose to 187,347.  The total number of combined cases across France, Germany, and Italy increased to 325,621 on Tuesday. That’s an increase of more than 24,000 across the 4 member states.

The Stats

It was a busy day on the Eurozone economic calendar on Tuesday. Key stats included March unemployment figures out of Germany and prelim March inflation figures for the Eurozone.

French consumer spending figures for February and 4th quarter GDP numbers out of Spain were of little interest on the day.

According to Destatis, Germany’s unemployment rate held steady at 5% in March, with claims rising by 1,000. While this was a positive number, the numbers were taken up to 12th March and do not reflect the impact of the coronavirus on employment conditions…

On the inflation front, the Eurozone’s annual rate of inflation softened from 1.2% to 0.7%, with the core annual rate of inflation easing from 1.2% to 1.0%. Month-on-month, consumer prices increased by 0.5% in March, following a 0.2% rise in February.