The second revision of the Euro Zone’s [B]Gross Domestic Product [/B]is set to confirm that the economy shrank -0.1% in the second quarter. The annual pace of contraction is expected to be revised slightly higher from -4.6% to -4.7%, but this is unlikely to be enough to stir the currency markets. Rather, traders will be looking at the expected upward revisions to the [B]Household Consumption[/B] and [B]Gross Fixed Capital[/B] components of the metric. An increasing number of market observers (ourselves included) are skeptical about whether the recent upswing in economic data around the globe is sustainable after the flow of government stimulus cash dries up. To this effect, measures of consumption and investment are going to be critical at this point in gauging whether a meaningful rebound in private demand can pick up where fiscal measures leave off.