3 Numbers: Sanctions Will Affect EU Growth, US Employment, US GDP

 | Jul 30, 2014 06:48AM ET

  • Russian sanctions will have detrimental affect on EU growth
  • Positive US employment expected to continue
  • 3 per cent US GDP growth 'will be sustainable'
  • Today’s update on economic sentiment for the Eurozone will be closely read after yesterday’s news that the European Union decided to tighten economic sanctions on Russia. Later, two reports for the US - the ADP Employment Report and the first estimate of second quarter GDP - will draw wide attention ahead of the Federal Reserve Bank's Federal Open Market Committee statement that hits the streets at 18:00 GMT. Eurozone: Economic Sentiment Indicator (09:00 GMT) Europe is reportedly set to impose tougher sanctions on Russia, a change that some economists say will pose a new threat to the Eurozone's wobbly economy. “A spiral of sanctions together with the loss of overall confidence could be enough to bring the already fragile economic recovery in Europe to a halt,” an economist with Allianz told Reuters yesterday. But there may be a bit of a disconnect in between the latest geopolitical events and today’s update on economic sentiment from the European Commission (EC). Indeed, this data may already be out of date in the wake of fast-moving events in the previous 24 hours. Nonetheless, the consensus forecast sees the Economic Sentiment Indicator (ESI) holding steady at 102 in today’s release for July - close to a three-year high. But the prediction for standing still is open for debate after last week’s decline in the flash estimate of the EC’s Consumer Confidence Indicator (CCI) for July, a component in the ESI data.

    A brighter profile can be found in last week’s Flash Eurozone PMI Composite Output Index, which climbed to a three-month high for this month's initial reading. “Many companies reported that business had picked up again in July after an unusually high number of holidays and a knock-on effect of mild winter weather had depressed activity in prior months,” Markit Economics advised.

    The question now is whether the optimism via the PMI release is subject to revision if Europe moves ahead with tougher sanctions?