3 Numbers: Eurozone Household Lending Set To Rise Again

 | Mar 27, 2017 01:53AM ET

  • Ifo’s Business Climate Survey data to reaffirm Germany’s moderate growth outlook
  • Lending to Eurozone households likely to tick higher in today's monetary release
  • Brazil’s consumer sentiment data for March could offer clue on recovery prospects
  • A preliminary measure of Germany’s macro profile for March is on tap today with the release of Ifo survey data. Later, new data on lending to households in the Eurozone in February will dispense another clue on the health of the economic recovery in the first quarter. Meanwhile, the monthly update of consumer confidence in Brazil will be widely read for fresh insight into deciding if the country’s recession will end later this year.

    Germany: Ifo Business Climate Survey (0800 GMT): Europe’s biggest economy remains on track to post solid gains in the near term, according to Markit’s PMI data for March. Last week's upbeat report suggests that today’s survey figures from Ifo will reaffirm that Germany’s economy is still humming along at a healthy pace.

    The country’s Composite PMI increased to 57.0 for this month’s flash reading, touching a 70-month high. “Firms responded to capacity pressures in March, with the rate of job creation in the private sector almost matching the survey record set six years ago,” a senior Markit economist said.

    The bubbly PMI report follows upwardly revised expectations for growth from the German Council of Economic Experts (GCEE), an academic group of policymakers. The council raised its growth forecast for the country to 1.7% for this year on a calendar-year basis, up fractionally from 1.6% in the previous estimate. The uptick is due to a healthy labour market, and a slight improvement in the outlook for the global economy, pro-cyclical fiscal policy in Germany, and the ongoing trend for expansionary monetary policy in the Eurozone, GCEE explained.

    Today’s business survey data from Ifo isn’t likely to challenge the bullish tone that’s supporting the near-term forecast for Germany. Economists see a mild decline in today’s results, based on TradingEconomics.com’s consensus forecast, but the current situation index is expected to hold near a six-year high in March.

    The expectations benchmark is softer and on track to edge lower today, but the consensus outlook still calls for a level that’s close to the strongest reading since late-2015.

    In the wake of positive numbers from other sources, however today’s results overall will probably strengthen the view that moderate growth remains intact for the German economy in the months ahead.

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