agenda 4

Makroökonomische Daten: 18 – 22 Februar 2013

In the euro area, ZEW and IFO confidence indices, the BNB survey in Belgium, and the second  estimate of the composite PMI should confirm the stabilisation of the cycle on still depressed  levels, albeit slightly better than at the end of 2012. …..


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            Broken down German GDP data will prove  that the stronger than expected contraction in 4Q 2012 was due to slower exports, and  probably to weaker domestic demand. French inflation is estimated to come in stable at 1.3%  y/y at the national level, whereas a one-tenth rise in the harmonised rate to 1.6% y/y cannot be  ruled out.
            Busy calendar of data releases in the United States next week. The CPI and PPI should show very  modest increases in January. Housing starts are expected to correct in January, after rising  strongly in December, while confirming the uptrend observed since mid-2011; existing home  sales should also drop modestly, without changing the positive outlook of the sector. The  minutes of the January FOMC meeting should signal that purchases are likely to continue for the  better part of the year.
             
            Monday, 18 February

            United States
            Markets closed for Presidents’ Day.

            Tuesday, 19 February
            Euro area

            Germany. The  ZEW index may take a breather in February, after recovering a standard  deviation in the two previous months. The expectations index could stabilise at 30.5 from  31.5. The current situation index may recover further ground, to 9 from a previous reading of  7.1, still below last October’s level.

            United States
            The NAHB  builders’ confidence index should rise to 48 in February, after pausing at 47 in  January, signalling a resumption of the uptrend in new home sales following a few months of  uncertainty.

            Wednesday, 20 February
            Euro area

            Germany. Producer prices could be up by only 0.1% m/m, as a result of lower energy prices in  euros, which should offset positive seasonal effects. Year-on-year, inflation is expected to slow  to 1.2% y/y, from 1.5% y/y the previous month.

            Germany. Inflation should be confirmed at 1.9% y/y, from a previous rate of 2.0% y/y both in  terms of the harmonised index and of the national index. In the month, consumer prices  dropped by 0.7% m/m in harmonised terms, and by 0.5% m/m at the national level, due to  negative seasonal effects and to moderating energy prices in euros. In January, the national  index was indexed at 100 in 2008 and should be made public with the second estimate.  

            France. Inflation is forecast to stay put at 1.3% y/y at the national level, but could rise back by  one-tenth to 1.6% y/y in terms of the harmonised rate. Consumer prices are expected to be  down by 0.3% m/m. Energy prices are estimated to have increased in January, contributing  positively to the CPI trend, based on the survey of petrol prices.

            France. The INSEE index of confidence among manufacturing companies is forecast at 88, up  from 86 in January. The previous month it had slowed sharply mostly on the back of views on  current production, with a downward revision of expectations for the following three months,  given the drop in foreign orders. In light of signals of a recovery in world trade, and of  improved confidence among German companies (in the past three months), we expect  confidence in France to return to at least the same levels seen last November, in any case  lower than in the first seven months of 2012.

            United States

            In January, housing starts are estimated to have decreased to 940k from 954k in December,  when the figure surged, especially in the volatile multi-family home segment. Building permits  should be up to 920k from 909k in December. The trend in residential construction is still  clearly up, and should bring an acceleration in the pace of growth compared to 2012, in line  with the indications provided by the builders’ confidence survey, currently consistent with  housing starts close to 1.4 million ann. The reduction in the stock of unsold existing homes,  and low mortgage rates, support forecasts for  a pick-up in housings starts in the months  ahead.

            The January  PPI  is expected to show a 0.5% m/m rise, after three consecutive monthly  declines in the autumn of 2012. The increase is largely due to the oil component, but also to  food prices. The core index should post a limited increase of 0.2% m/m, only slightly higher  than the +0.1% m/m December rate. The price components of the manufacturing sector  surveys point to a modest reacceleration in inflation upstream of the production process in the  months ahead. The depreciation of the dollar, and the increase in the price of oil, will fuel  upside pressures on production prices.

            The Fed will publish the minutes of the January FOMC meeting. The minutes should shed light  on the debate opened in December on the expected duration of the purchase programme,  and on potential changes in communication, aimed at improving transparency on the FOMC’s  reaction capacity.

            Thursday, 21 February
            Euro area

            The composite PMI  should confirm a recovery in January, to 48.6 from a previous reading of  47.2. The manufacturing PMI rose last month to 47.9 from 46.1, and we cannot rule out a slight  decline in the wake of the French index. We estimate the services index to be confirmed at 48.6,  from 47.8 the previous month. While on the recovery compared to the autumn, the PMI indices  remain compatible with a slight contraction in euro area GDP also at the beginning of 2013,  after the drop recorded at the end of 2012.

            United States
            The January CPI is expected to be up by 0.1% m/m, with the core index on the rise by 0.2%  m/m. January should bring a sizeable drop in the price of gasoline, due to the seasonal  correction; this should result in the fourth consecutive decline in the energy component. As  regards the core index, a modest reacceleration in the shelter component is expected, to  +0.2% m/m (from 0.1% m/m in December), due to higher hotel rates. In year-on-year terms,  the core index is estimated to rise by 1.8% y/y, marginally less than the 1.9% y/y readings of  November and December.

            The  Philadelphia Fed index in February is forecast to rise to 3.5 from -5.8 in January. The  January survey was negative, both in terms of the overall index and of the breakdown, with  the orders component in particular returning into negative territory. The manufacturing sector  ISM marked two consecutive increases and levelled off at 53.1 in January, improving  significantly from 49.9 in November. We expect the regional surveys to recover, after  underperforming the national index for several months, confirming the expansion of activity in  the sector, and its acceleration in the course of the year.

            Friday, 22 February
            Euro area

            Germany. The IFO index is forecast to prove stable in February at 104.2, after recovering in the  two previous months. We expect  the current situation index to come in stable at 108.2, after  rising back over the long-term average (101.2) in the past two months, although a slight  retracement is possible, given the indications of a sharp drop in foreign orders highlighted by the  Belgian survey last month. The expectations component could rise to 100.6 from 100.5, in the  wake of positive signals from global demand; the  index would in any case stay broadly in line  with the long-term average (100.5). The recovery of the German economy will be gradual, and  lacking January data on industrial output and/or exports, it is hard to tell whether GDP will be  able to return into neutral territory after the weak end to 2012.

            Germany. The detailed estimate of  4Q 2012 GDP should confirm a 0.6% q/q decline, with  growth slowing by -0.4% y/y vs. a previous rate of 0.9% y/y. The slowdown of the German  economy is probably due to a drop in exports, which we estimate to have left the contribution of  foreign trade at -0.3%. Domestic demand should also be down by 0.1% q/q due to a  contraction in spending on machinery (-2.1% q/q) and a slowdown in consumer spending (flat in  the quarter). The 0.6% q/q contraction at the end of 2012 is still compatible with an average  annual growth rate of +0.7%, but the weak end of the year has left our estimate for 2013 at  +0.4%, assuming GDP resumes growing by 0.1% q/q in 1Q 2013, as suggested by monthly
            surveys.

            Belgium. After the January decline, we expect the BNB index to recover this month, to -11.8, still  well below its long-term average. More in detail, we expect sentiment to brighten in  manufacturing, after last month’s sharp contraction in foreign orders.
            Italy. After collapsing in January, consumer confidence could rebound marginally in February, to  85 in our estimate, not far from the record-low hit last month (84.6). Depressed assessments on  the family financial situation and unemployment expectations will continue to weigh on  households’ morale.

            United States

            Existing home sales should be down in January to 4.90 million from 4.94 in December, in light  of poor pending home sales figures in December. A correction in January would not alter the  uptrend in sales, which we expect to continue in the quarters ahead.


            Appendix

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