Eurozone PMIs, US PMI And New Home Sales

 | Apr 23, 2014 07:22AM ET

An early look at the economic trend in April is on tap for today via several flash PMI numbers for Europe. The first estimate of this month's manufacturing PMI data for the US will be published today as well. In addition, an update on new home sales for the US in March will provide more context for evaluating the outlook for the housing market.

Eurozone Flash Composite PMI (08:00 GMT): The macro profile for April is still largely a mystery, but today’s flash report for manufacturing and services PMI data will set the tone for expectations. Overall, the outlook for moderate growth will probably survive today’s updates. Economists project that manufacturing activity will remain unchanged at a moderate rate of growth while the services sector will decelerate a bit but stay well above the neutral 50 mark.

The Eurozone’s mild recovery, in short, is expected to roll on in April, according to these benchmarks. PMI data in both series has been pointing to growth since last summer and most analysts see more of the same in this month’s update. The main issue is whether the growth is strong enough to counteract the rising threat of disinflation/deflation. With Eurozone year-over-year inflation slipping to a faint 0.5 percent in March, even die-hard monetary hawks are talking about the possibility that a more aggressive round of monetary stimulus may be necessary.

The danger is that the low rate of inflation is an early warning that Europe’s weak recovery is at risk. Recent data suggest otherwise, albeit moderately so. Industrial production across the Eurozone in February rose 0.2 percent, a mild improvement over January’s flat output. But with inflation still falling, there’s widespread concern that growth could weaken. If that’s a genuine threat, we’ll see the evidence in today’s PMI report via a surprisingly soft set of numbers.