DE PMI, ECB Announcement, U.S. Jobless Claims

 | May 02, 2013 05:48AM ET

Updates on manufacturing PMIs for France, Germany and the Eurozone are scheduled for release, just ahead of the European Central Bank’s monetary policy announcement. Later, the weekly jobless claims report for the U.S. will be closely scrutinised for new clues about the business cycle after the news that manufacturing and payrolls growth weakened again in April.

Germany PMI Manufacturing Index
Output slipped again in last week's flash estimate of manufacturing activity for April. The question is whether the follow-up number for last month reveals that this crucial slice of Germany’s economy suffered even more than initially estimated? The market will be keenly interested in the answer as this is one of the last major bits of Eurozone economic news before today’s monetary policy announcement from the European Central Bank.

The first PMI guesstimate for Germany is likely to hold, more or less, although a big downside surprise would further raise expectations that the ECB will cut interest rates. Even if Germany’s manufacturing PMI stays at 47.9 for April, the recent trend still raises plenty of doubts about the eurozone’s last line of macro defence. Some analysts are inclined to write off the country’s soft economic numbers of late as a temporary slowdown due to weather - the winter just passed was reportedly Germany’s coldest in 25 years. Perhaps it is plausible, but that is a debate for another day, and one that will be resolved soon with incoming data. Meanwhile, if today’s final PMI number for German manufacturing stumbles further relative to the flash estimate, the market will be especially anxious as the ECB announcement draws near.