European Equities: A Quiet Economic Calendar May Test the Majors

In This Article:

Economic Calendar:

Wednesday, 17th June

Eurozone Core CPI (YoY) (May) Final

Eurozone CPI (MoM) (May) Final

Eurozone CPI (YoY) (May) Final

Thursday, 18th June

ECB Economic Bulletin

Friday, 19th June

German PPI (MoM) (May)

The Majors

It was a bullish day for the European major on Tuesday, with the DAX30 rallying by 3.39% to lead the way. The CAC40 and EuroStoxx600 weren’t far behind, with gains of 2.84% and 2.90% respectively.

On the day, the markets brushed aside news of a pickup in new COVID-19 cases in the U.S and Beijing. The FED’s Monday announcement that it would begin purchasing individual corporate bonds drove the majors on the day.

Ahead of the European open, the Bank of Japan also delivered support, announcing that it is extending its corporate lending program to a whopping $1tn.

With the U.S government also planning to jump on the bandwagon and EU member states having delivered, there may be even more on the horizon…

The Stats

It was a relatively busy day on the Eurozone economic calendar on Tuesday. Key stats included June’s ZEW economic sentiment figures for France and Germany and Eurozone wage growth numbers.

There were also finalized inflation figures out of Germany, though there was very little interest in the numbers on the day.

Germany’s ZEW Economic Sentiment Index rose from 51.0 to 63.4, coming in ahead of a forecasted rise to 60.0. There was also a modest improvement in the current conditions index, which rose from -93.5 to -83.1. Economists had forecast a rise to -84.0.

From the Eurozone, the ZEW Economic Sentiment Index rose from 46.0 to 58.6, with wages growing by 3.4% in the 1st quarter. In the 4th quarter of last year, wages had risen by 2.4%.

From the U.S

Retail sales and industrial production figures for May were in focus ahead of FED Chair Powell’s testimony to lawmakers.

Month-on-month, core retail sales jumped by 12.4% in May, partially recovering from a 17.2% slump in April. Economists had forecast a 5.5% increase. Retail sales surged by 17.7%, reversing a 14.7% slide in April. Economists had forecast an 8% rise.

Industrial production stabilized as lockdown measures eased, with production rising by 1.4%. In April production had tumbled by 11.2%, month-on-month. Year-on-year, production was down by 15.27%, following a 16.25 % slump in April.

FED Chair Powell’s live testimony to lawmakers was the main event of the day, however. The FED Chair continued to advise the markets that there was a long way to go before an economic recovery in the U.S.

Powell also noted that employment remained well below pre-pandemic levels as did output.