3 Numbers To Watch: EU Retail Sales, US Jobs & Consumer Comfort

 | Oct 03, 2013 06:56AM ET

Thursday brings the latest updates for several purchasing managers indices (PMI) throughout Europe, although the hard-data report for August retail sales in the Eurozone may be the day’s most revealing number. Meanwhile, amid the ongoing shutdown of the federal government in the US, the available economic data will receive more attention than usual in search of fresh clues on how the economy is holding up. Two of today’s key numbers to watch for the US include the weekly update on initial jobless claims and the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index.

Eurozone Retail Sales (09:00 GMT): Consumer spending picked up a bit in the July report on retail sales in Europe, but the softer numbers in the September Eurozone PMI update suggests that the trend could weaken again. But not today, or so we're told. Analysts say that today’s August report on retail sales will improve relative to the previous release. The consensus forecast sees a 0.2 percent rise for August, up slightly from July’s 0.1 percent advance. Even so, economists still anticipate that the red ink in the year-over-year comparison for retail consumption will slip a bit more, falling 1.4 percent over the 12 months through August versus a 1.3 percent decline in the previous report.

Commenting on last week’s Eurozone Retail PMI report for September, a senior economist at Markit Economics advised in a press release (pdf) that “Eurozone retail sales failed to build on August’s growth, largely due to a reverse in France. But viewed in context the recent data are encouraging, with the underlying upward trajectory of the PMI since April corroborated by official data showing a 0.2 percent rise in consumer spending in Q2.” He added that "German retail growth slowed further in September, but may pick up again following the election result.” Meantime, the market will look to today’s hard data on retail spending for deciding just how much optimism is credible at the moment when it comes to looking ahead for the Eurozone.