ECB Report, US Jobless And Consumer Comfort

 | Jul 11, 2013 07:26AM ET

Today’s release of the European Central Bank's (ECB) monthly report may shed light on whether the central banking will push further for euro devaluation as a tool for boosting exports in the months ahead. Meanwhile, jobless claims and the latest weekly release of the Bloomberg consumer comfort index are the main events in US economic news (along with an 12:30 GMT release of import/export prices).

European Central Bank Monthly Report (08:00 GMT); Few analysts think the ECB will make any dramatic changes at the next scheduled monetary policy announcement on August 1. But a lot will happen between now and then, including several weeks of economic updates. Meantime, today’s monthly report is, as always, worth a look for evaluating the state of mind, so to speak, for the institution that remains the last, best hope for shaking the Eurozone out of its recession sooner rather than later.

One topic that I’ll be reviewing for clues on ECB policy is bound up with exports. In the lead editorial in the June report (pdf), the bank again referenced the potential for export growth as a supporting pillar for recovery in this year’s second half and beyond. That’s an increasingly topical issue at the moment with the euro weakening against the US dollar. EURUSD is currently hovering around the 1.28 range, or roughly the low so far for the year. Exports, of course, are central to Germany’s economy, which in turn is the foundation for any talk of expansion in Europe at the moment. Given the relatively encouraging results with “Abenomics” in Japan, which includes juicing exports via a weaker yen, it’s not hard to imagine that the ECB is quietly following suit while Europe’s recession drags on.

It doesn’t take a genius to realize that Europe needs a weaker currency. Economic fundamentals certainly warrant no less. Comparing the Eurozone to the US, or even Japan these days, tells the story. The ECB isn’t likely to come out and blatantly announce that it’s pursuing a lower euro. That said, it would be foolish to let the current opportunity slip by. With downside momentum in EURUSD front and center, the time is ripe to stoke the fires of the decline. Yes, a weaker euro would raise inflation, but that’s a positive at this stage for the Continent because any fallout would be more than offset by export-led growth.
Germany begs to differ, of course, despite the role that exports play in its economy. Nonetheless, Europe's macro leader is probably why the ECB isn’t taking a more aggressive line in stimulating animal spirits through monetary policy.