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European Equities: Reaction to the FOMC Meeting Minutes Likely to Overshadow Today’s Stats

In This Article:

Economic Calendar

Thursday, 6th January

German Factory Orders (MoM) (Nov)

IHS Markit Construction PMI (Dec)

German CPI (MoM) (Dec)

Friday, 7th January

German Industrial Production (MoM) (Nov)

German Trade Balance (Nov)

French Consumer Spending (MoM) (Nov)

Eurozone CPI (YoY) (Dec) Prelim

Eurozone Retail Sales (MoM) (Nov)

The Majors

It was yet another bullish day for the European majors on Wednesday. The EuroStoxx600 rose by 0.07%, with the CAC40 and the DAX30 ending the day up by 0.74% and by 0.81% respectively.

Economic data from the Eurozone failed to weigh on risk sentiment in spite of the Eurozone’s composite PMI falling to a 9-month low. Eurozone economic powerhouse Germany saw its composite PMI fall to an 18-month low in December. The markets were in forgiving mood, with the services sector doing the damage as a result of the Omicron strain and surge in new cases.

The upside on the day was modest, however, with the FOMC meeting minutes out after the European close.

The Stats

It was another busy Eurozone economic calendar this morning. Member state and Eurozone service sector and composite PMIs were in focus.

Member States

For Spain, the services PMI fell from 59.8 to 55.8 versus a forecasted 57.5.

Service sector activity in Italy saw slower growth, with the PMI down from 55.9 to 53.0. Economists had forecast a fall to 54.0.

For France, the services PMI fell from 57.4 to 57.0, which was down from a prelim 57.1.

Germany’s services PMI declined from 52.7 to 48.7, which was up from a prelim 48.4.

The Eurozone

For the Eurozone, the services PMI fell from 55.9 to 53.1, which was down from a prelim 53.3.

As a result, the Composite PMI slipped from 55.4 to 53.3, which was down from a prelim 53.4.

According to the December survey,

  • Economic growth eased to a 9-month low in December.

  • Rising COVID-19 cases had a more marked impact on service sector activity.

  • At the end of the year, supply-related disruptions continued to impact production schedules.

  • In spite of supply chain issues, the manufacturing sector outpaced the services sector for the 1st time since July.

  • Composite output PMIs by country all declined during December.

  • Slower rates of growth were seen in Ireland, France, Spain, and Italy.

  • Demand for goods and services across the Eurozone rose at the slowest pace since March.

  • More significantly, demand from international clients rose at the slowest pace since January.

  • By contrast, business optimism improved marginally in December, coinciding with a pickup in the pace of hiring.

  • On the inflation front, output charges and input costs increased at the second-sharpest rates on record.