EU Retail, German Orders, US Jobless Claims

 | Feb 06, 2014 03:59AM ET

Thursday's a busy day for economic and monetary policy news. The main event: the European Central Bank’s interest rate announcement that’s scheduled for 12:45 GMT, along with the press conference that follows at 13:30 GMT. Two numbers that precede the ECB chatter may offer a clue on what the central bank will say. First up is the January report on the retail purchasing managers index (PMI) for Europe. Next, an update on new factory orders for Germany. Later, keep an eye on the latest weekly update on US initial jobless claims for fresh perspective on how the labour market’s evolving.

Eurozone Retail PMI (09:10 GMT) Retail sales in Europe unexpectedly declined in December, falling a hefty 1.6 percent from November, Eurostat reported yesterday. "I can't say that deflation is a likely prospect, but it's a bigger risk than it was just two months ago," Peter Dixon at Commerzbank told BBC. “It will highlight the pressure on the ECB."

The latest hard numbers on retail spending don’t offer any reason to dismiss Dixon's analysis. Even worse, the survey numbers for the retail industry across Europe have been biased toward contraction for several months. Today’s PMI report for January will be useful for deciding if the gloomy news on retail consumption at 2013’s close has spilled over into 2014. It would be surprising to learn otherwise in a convincing degree. As you can see from the chart below, both spending and sentiment in retail has been trending deeper into the red lately. Another weak update in the PMI report will only add more weight to the argument that the ECB should announce a stronger monetary plan today to stabilise if not reverse the negative momentum that may be building in retail and elsewhere.

Another cut in interest rates is one option, but it’s hardly the only choice. Reuters lays out several possibilities for the ECB. In fact, the main challenge is less about the technical details of unleashing a stronger form of monetary stimulus vs. mustering the discipline to act while there’s still time to make a meaningful difference. This much is clear: doing nothing, again, is an increasingly risky proposition at this late date. Some folks say that the central bank alone can’t solve Europe’s deep structural problems. True, but the ECB still has the power to prevent an even deeper strain of macro stress.