3 Numbers To Watch: Manufacturing In Focus For Spain, Italy & US

 | Dec 02, 2013 04:32AM ET

Monday’s a busy day for updates with purchasing managers indexes (PMIs) in the manufacturing sector. Several releases are revisions to the flash estimates for November that were previously released — Germany (08:53 GMT) and the Eurozone (08:58 GMT), for instance. As usual, the second round of PMI estimates aren't likely to change much from the earlier numbers, or so history suggests. By contrast, the surprise potential is higher with today’s first look at November manufacturing PMI data for Spain and Italy. Later, keep an eye on the debut of the US ISM Manufacturing Index for November.

Spain Manufacturing PMI (08:13 GMT) Europe’s fourth-largest economy continues to dispense encouraging economic data. Spain is still deeply depressed, of course, but the numbers have been moving in a positive direction lately and so today’s PMI update for November will offer an early clue for deciding if the trend will roll on. Meantime, the latest hard data on industrial production paints an upbeat picture. Indeed, industrial output increased in September for the first time in more than two years on a year-over-year basis, the National Statistics Institute in Madrid reported last month.

An upbeat number in today’s PMI release for manufacturing would boost confidence that Spain’s recovery has momentum. The prospect of even tepid growth for this battered economy is crucial at a time of heightened worries about disinflation/deflation for the Eurozone overall.

Although last week’s flash estimate of November inflation inched higher to an annual rate of 0.9 percent vs. 0.7 percent in the previous month, the rate is still far below the European Central Bank’s (ECB) two percent target. “The overall assessment remains that inflation is very low,” an economist at Ernst & Young observed on Friday. “We think that the ECB needs to recognise the risk of deflation more clearly and act pre-emptively.” If one of Europe’s main macro burdens can continue to recover, the ECB’s job will be easier and the general outlook for the Eurozone brighter. Deciding if that’s still a plausible scenario begins anew this week, starting with today’s PMI update for Spain.