German ZEW, US NFIB Optimism Index & Retail Sales

 | May 13, 2014 05:30AM ET

After a muted start to the week, the number of economic releases is picking up and today's updates include the ZEW sentiment survey data for Germany. We’ll also see how the mood is faring in the small business sector for the US, followed by the US government’s estimate of retail sales in April.

Germany: ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment (09:00 GMT): Germany and Francepresented a united front to send a warning to Russia this past weekend, but a determined stance in reaction to the crisis over the Ukraine may come with a hefty economic price tag for Europe. For example, a recent reportissued by the European Commission estimates that imposing harsh sanctions on Russia could reduce growth in Germany to the point that Europe’s leading economy flirts with a new recession.

Unsurprisingly, the potential for macro fallout in Europe is weighing on economic expectations for Germany, according to recent estimates of investor sentiment via the monthly survey numbers from the Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW). The forward-looking economic sentiment benchmark fell to 43.2 in the April report—the lowest since last August. Although that’s still well above the historical average of 24.6, the recent weakness is a reminder that investors are increasingly cautious in the wake of the festering Ukraine crisis.

The crowd may be wary of the worst-case scenario in tussle with Russia, but expectations are still improving about the current state of the economic conditions in Germany. Indeed, ZEW’s economic situation index increased in April to 59.5, the highest in nearly three years.

The key questions in today’s report: Is sentiment still deteriorating when considering the near-term future? If so, is the souring mood taking a toll on the current assessment of economic conditions? Analysts expect another mixed review. The consensus forecast sees a slide in expectations, but that's projected to be offset by another rise in the measure of current conditions.