3 Numbers: Fragile German Consumer Mood, U.S. Spending, Services PMI

 | Jun 25, 2015 01:38AM ET

Thursday’s a busy day for economic releases, which includes a fresh look at the mood in Germany’s consumer sector via the monthly report from Gfk. Later, two reports on the US economy will deliver fresh guidance for evaluating the prospects for stronger growth in this year’s second half. First up is the government’s personal income and spending data for May, followed by the flash reading of Markit’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for the services sector in June.

Germany: Gfk Consumer Climate Indicator (06:00 GMT): Recent worries about the Greek crisis took a heavier-than-expected toll on business sentiment in Germany this month, according to yesterday’s updated survey numbers from the Ifo Institute. Will today’s report on consumer confidence via Gfk deliver similar news?

Businesses expectations certainly reflect a softer outlook at the moment. The Ifo metric that monitors expectations fell for the third straight month, suggesting that Germany's economic growth will be slightly lower than previously estimated. But perhaps a downgrade will be temporary, contingent on what happens with wrote Holger Sandte, Nordea’s chief European analyst.

Today’s focus turns to the mood in the consumer sector. The unsettled state of negotiations with Greece remains a key variable at the moment. How much has this drama affected sentiment?

Not much, based on Econoday.com’s consensus forecast for today's release. The Gfk Consumer Climate Index is expected to remain unchanged at 10.2 for the projected July reading. That’s a relatively elevated level based on recent history, which implies that the crowd’s effectively looking for continued strength in the consumer sector. Nonetheless, the optimism continues to rest on a rather shaky proposition: a satisfactory outcome to the Greek crisis.