EU Industrial Production, US Retail Sales, EURUSD

 | Apr 14, 2014 05:55AM ET

• Mildly positive EU industrial output data expected
• US retail sales to rebound from winter blues
• Uncertain directional outlook for EURUSD

Monday is a slow news day in terms of the quantity of economic releases, although two hard-data updates will receive wide attention: Eurozone industrial production and US retail sales. Along the way, keep an eye on EURUSD, which made a bullish U-turn last week.

Eurozone Industrial Production (09:00 GMT): The economic recovery in Europe is weak, but it’s still alive. Judging by industrial activity, the annual trend has been strengthening in recent months. But the improvement is accompanied by heightened deflation risk and so plenty of uncertainty continues to lurk over the macro outlook. No wonder that the US and the IMF are calling on the European Central Bank (ECB) to take a more aggressive stance with monetary stimulus. Although some corners of Europe ex-Germany are showing improvement, the frail recovery is unbalanced and vulnerable if there's an unexpected shock.

Europe's economy is improving but remains vulnerable. Photo: Paul Grecaud / iStock

“The markets anticipate an economic recovery,” said an ECB executive board member earlier this month. “At the ECB we consider that the recovery has already arrived, but we know it to be gradual and fragile.”

Deciding if that’s still assuming too much is a work in progress and subject to revision with each new data point. Today’s main event for updating the analysis is the February data on EU industrial activity. The numbers for the big economies have already been published and the monthly comparisons are positive save for Italy’s bigger-than-expected 0.5 percent slump, according to Eurostat data. But that’s offset to a degree with Spain’s pick-up in industrial output in February vs. the previous month: up 0.7 percent vs. January's 0.2 percent gain.

Breaking free of the negative macro forces will take time, even under the best of circumstances. “The degree of slack in the economy is very high” and “is unlikely to be closed in the euro zone before 2017,” another ECB board member warned last week. Today’s update on industrial activity will probably bring another round of mildly positive news. But if the data looks surprisingly weak, sentiment could take a heavy blow at a point when the well of wishful thinking has run dangerously low.