3 Numbers: German Outlook Upbeat As Consumer Sentiment Slide Steadies

 | Nov 26, 2015 01:51AM ET

US markets are closed today for the Thanksgiving holiday, but several economic reports for Europe are scheduled, including revised data for Spain’s third-quarter GDP. Later, the European Central Bank publishes new money supply numbers for October, followed by Gfk’s report on consumer sentiment in Germany.

Spain: Q3 GDP Revision (0800 GMT): Growth has moderated in Europe’s fourth-largest economy, as today’s revised numbers on third-quarter GDP will reaffirm. Although the previously reported 0.8% quarterly gain in output in Q3 is still strong by Eurozone standards, the deceleration from Q2’s 1.0% advance has heightened worries for the currency bloc’s growth leader among the big-four economies.

Will the downshift in Q3 spill over into this year’s final quarter? No, according to Spain’s economy minister, Luis de Guindo, who offered an upbeat analysis in an interview this past Sunday. “Early indications tell us that at least for the month of October growth was stronger than the third quarter,” he advised.

Business sentiment in Spain is still bullish, but next month’s general elections are weighing on expectations. “The prospect of a period of political uncertainty has the potential to put the brakes on the economy around the turn of the year as firms and clients alike operate a wait-and-see approach,” a Markit economist noted earlier this month.

FocusEconomics advised last week that “early polls point to a fragmented Parliament, which is unchartered waters for the country and could increase the risk of policy inaction going forward.”

Meantime, BBVA’s new forecast sees a slower rate of growth for Spain next year: 2.7%, down from 3.2% that the bank projects for the full-year increase this year. The key headwinds include “the loss of momentum of world demand, exhaustion of certain cyclical factors and increasing uncertainty, which is partly associated with the Spanish electoral cycle,” BBVA explained.

Today’s revision of GDP data for Q3 is widely expected to remain unchanged at 0.8%, matching the initial estimate for quarter-over-quarter growth. But until we move past the December elections, the macro outlook for Spain is in a holding pattern.