[B]European indices to open lower as late efforts to avoid the sequester fail[/B]
Today’s UK opening call provides an update on:
• Last ditch efforts to avoid the sequester in the US fail;
• Chinese manufacturing barely grows in February;
• Eurozone manufacturing PMIs expected to improve slightly in February;
• Unemployment in the euro area to creep up again to 11.8%.
European stock markets are expected to open lower this morning, after last ditch efforts to avoid the sequester in the US failed.
The failure is hardly surprising given the casual approach we’ve seen towards the sequester in recent months. John Boehner and Harry Reid are actually due to have their first face to face meeting with Obama today at the White House, which shows just how seriously they are taking this. All we’ve seen in recent months is yet another sign that those in Congress are more concerned with their political agenda than doing what’s best for the country.
The only upside here is that compared to the potential impact of going over the fiscal cliff last year, a 0.5% hit to GDP isn’t likely to shake up the markets to much.
The data out of China has done little to help, with both the official manufacturing figure and the HSBC PMI falling back sharply in February, however on the upside, they both remained in growth territory. There was suggestions last month that we may see this slide, as an increase in activity was also accompanied by an increase in inventories, so this drop may only be temporary. However, it does suggest that the recovery seen in China is not quite as strong as people had hoped.
Once again there’s plenty of economic data out today, starting in Europe with the release of the manufacturing PMIs. A small improvement is expected in the Italian, French a German figures, with the latter returning to growth territory for the first time in 12 months, while the figure for the eurozone as a whole is expected to be revised slightly lower to 47.8, which is still much improved on what we saw for the majority of 2012.
Over in the UK, a slight improvement is also expected, with the manufacturing PMI forecast to come out at 51.0 for February, up marginally on the previous months figure but more importantly, the third consecutive month we’ve seen a growth figure. This in no way suggests things are improving dramatically in the UK, because they’re not, we’re still going to see marginal growth this year at best. However it is a positive sign that we’re starting to see a small recovery in an industry that has struggled over the past couple of years.
Unemployment is expected to rise again in the eurozone to 11.8% in January, despite slowing in the three months to the end of the year. We’ve seen a steady rise in the unemployment figure for a couple of years now, but we appear to have hit a point now where the rise is going to be much slower. I think we’ll continue to see it go up, but not at the pace we’ve become accustomed to, which suggests the overall rate of decline may finally be slowing in the region.
In the US later on today, the main focus in terms of economic data will be on the revised UoM consumer sentiment figure for February, which is expected to remain at 76.3, and the manufacturing PMI for February, which is expected to fall back to 52.7.
[B]The euro is trading higher against the dollar[/B] this morning. The pair was looking quite bullish, having broken above the 100 day simple moving average on Wednesday, however the fall yesterday suggests there may be some more downside still to come. If that’s the case, we could see the pair fall back towards 1.29, however first we’ll have to see a proper break of the 61.8 fib level on the daily chart. If we don’t see this, it would suggest the pair has bottomed out and the outlook in the shorter term is bullish.
[B]Sterling is trading higher against the dollar[/B] this morning. There has been some consolidation in this pair over the last week or so, following the big sell off over the last couple of months, which is general is a relatively bearish signal. We could actually see it pull back to test 1.53 as a new level of resistance, although at this stage I’m not convinced there are enough buyers. What’s more likely is that we’ll see further consolidation followed by more selling, with the next target being 1.49.
[B]The dollar is trading flat against the yen[/B] this morning. We’ve seen some recovery in the last few days, however the moves have only been minor which suggests there may be more downside in the pair. If this is the case, the next target would be 88.80, a previous level of support and resistance. In the longer term though, I remain bullish, this is simple a case of how big the pull back will be on the uptrend.
[B]The euro is trading flat against the pound[/B] today. This pair, like many others, has entered a period of consolidation recently, however I remain quite bullish. In the shorter term, I think we’ll see further consolidation however beyond this, I think once we see a break of the descending trend line, we should see a move much higher, with the next level of resistance coming around 0.875, followed by 0.88 and 0.89.
Ahead of the open we expect to see…