Eurozone Equities: One Way Bet

 | Jan 15, 2014 12:31AM ET

There seems to be no lack of stock market friendly news in the eurozone. Good news is construed as good news for the stock market. Eurostat reported that industrial production printed blowout numbers for November:

Industrial production across the euro zone jumped by a faster-than-expected 1.8 percent on the month, the biggest increase since May 2010 and rebounding after an upwardly revised 0.8 percent drop in October, the EU's statistics office Eurostat said on Tuesday.

"Today's industrial production figures make for encouraging reading and will fuel hopes of a sustained recovery in 2014," said ING bank economist Martin van Vliet.  

On the other hand, bad news can be good news too. ECB chief Mario Draghi recently reiterated the Draghi Put, though he is holding his fire because the risk of deflation is not imminent:

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said that deflation in some Eurozone member states is the result of a necessary adjustment process but added that he does not see a risk of broad-based deflation across the currency area.

In a letter to European parliamentarian Auke Zijlstra published on the ECB's website Monday, Draghi also said he expected annual inflation to remain near its current level over the next few months. Annual EMU inflation stood at 0.8% in December, according to Eurostat.

He did reassure the markets that he would continue to do "whatever it takes" to save the eurozone:

Draghi reiterated that the ECB stands by its forward guidance and is "ready to use all available instruments to fulfil our mandate."

h2 A constructive technical picture/h2

From a technical viewpoint, the outlook for eurozone equities is constructive. The chart below shows the relative ratio of the ETF for the Euro STOXX 50 (FEZ) against the ETF for the MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI). All prices are in USD in order to neutralize the currency effect.