[B]Mixed morning in Europe ahead of busy days in US[/B]
Today’s US opening call provides an update on:
[ul]
[li]Australian GDP disappoints in yet another blow to the economy
[/li][li]Mixed morning for the eurozone after services PMI figures are released
[/li][li]UK Services PMI figure beats expectations in PMI hat-trick
[/li][li]US expecting strong ADP non-farm payroll figure
[/li][li]ISM non-manufacturing PMI release grabs attention after Monday’s shock
[/li][/ul]
The markets came to terms with yet another blow to the Australian economy after yet another poor release this morning. The expectations of a rise in the quarterly GDP figure failed to come to fruition with the 0.6% rate staying steady instead of the 0.8% figure predicted across the markets. Furthermore, when taking into account the year on year figure, an increasingly bleak picture comes to the fore in an economy which has been hit hard by the reduction in export prices over the past year. The yearly figure shows that for Q1, the economy grew at 2.5%; 0.6% lower than the previous figure of 3.1%. A note from RBA governor Glenn Stevens yesterday disclosed the bank’s willingness to take the interest rate lower in the coming period where necessary and given his insistence that the Australian dollar remains overvalued, I expect to see a reduction in this rate at next month’s meeting. This is a view which is shared by Goldman Sachs who believe the rate will be reduced in July and November.
A mixed morning in the eurozone after a host of prominent countries released their services PMI figures for the month of May. Off the back of better than expected manufacturing figures on Monday, the markets were predicting a significant uptick in these figures, yet were left largely disappointed after only Spain posted a better than expected figure of 47.3 (from 44.4 in April). Elsewhere, Italy, France and Germany all posted poor numbers in a clear indication that the crisis is most certainly ongoing in the region. The most disappointing of these figures was the German failure to push above the crucial 50.0 mark which was within reach today from a basis of 49.6 from April.
Across the channel, the UK was proving to be experiencing a significantly more productive morning, releasing the May services PMI figure. By posting a substantial increase (54.9 from 52.9), not only did it substantially beat market forecasts, but also provided a clean sweep of PMI figures for the month, after the manufacturing and construction figures both came in well above expectations earlier in the week. This provides us with an increasingly positive picture of the UK economy given that a similar out-performance occurred across all three sectors in April too which allows us to believe there is now an element of consistency within the recovery. In a notable response, JP Morgan has now retracted a call for further QE, predicting that the economy has clear upside potential. As a result they posted renewed GDP forecasts of 1% for Q2 and 1.5% for Q3. However, the official report provided alongside today’s release predicts a more moderate increase of 0.5% for Q2 which would likely present one of the strongest Q2 growth performances of G7 economies.
In the US, the markets looks forward to a busy day of trading, with the release of the ADP non-farm payroll figure paving the way for a employment focused end of the week. The ability of this figure to provide any substantial indication of Friday’s non-farm payroll release is arguable given the poor record of any correlation between the two over recent months. However, this is still a figure which is treated with respect across the markets and thus traders are likely to be wary of any market shocks as a result of today’s release. Forecasts within the markets are placing expectations around a shift higher from 119k to 171k off the back of three consecutive months of reduced employment figures. Subsequently I am a little more pessimistic for this release, with a lower figure around 150k seeming more likely. That being said, guess the payroll figures has always been somewhat of a fools game so traders will tend to be treading carefully around this release.
Lastly, we are expecting the ISM non-manufacturing PMI figure later in the day, which is predicted to bring about a rise in the figure from 53.1 to 53.4. What has become clear over the past week is how sensitive markets are becoming to economic releases of this sort given the substantial sell-off seen on Monday after the manufacturing figure came in well below expectations. I do not expect to see as strong a reaction regardless of the figure posted today simply due to the fact that this is unlikely to fall below that crucial 50.0 mark which denotes an industry in contraction. However, markets will be following this figure keenly as a potential precursor to additional significant market movement.
US markets are expected to open lower, with the S&P500 -6 points and DJIA -48 points.