3 Numbers: German Confidence Rising, Eurozone Sentiment, U.S. Redbook

 | Apr 21, 2015 01:24AM ET

Tuesday’s another slow day for economic updates, although two reports will provide timely news on the outlook for Germany and the Eurozone via ZEW's sentiment indexes. Later, a peek at retail spending in the US for April is in focus with the weekly release of the Johnson Redbook Index.

reported last week. The chief economist at the Ifo Institute explained the case for a rosy view, noting that “the low oil price leaves the Germans more money for consumption, and the low euro is pushing exports”.

Thinking positively about the macro trend has been the narrative in several sentiment benchmarks for Germany in recent months. Today’s April release for the ZEW Economic Sentiment Indicator, which measures the mood among German financial experts, will test if the positive momentum in this year’s first quarter is on track to roll over into Q2.

The crowd’s assuming no less. Econoday.com’s consensus forecast projects another month of improvement. The expectations data for the April ZEW release is expected to rise to 56.3 – a modest increase over March’s 55.1. If the prediction holds up, this measure of the mood will touch a nine-month high. Macro risk linked with the heightened uncertainty over Greece may be bubbling again, but signs of worry within Europe’s growth engine are on track remain in short supply by way of today’s ZEW update.