Major News For The Week Of June 11-15, 2012

 | Jun 12, 2012 07:08AM ET

Last week was a veritable rollercoaster. The economic woes of the eurozone continue to take centre stage in global finance. Europe is not, however, the only economy to show signs of slowing down. Chinese authorities saw fit to reduce the key interest rate in the People’s Republic just before the weekend, which was brimming with releases of economic data. Even in Canada, the economic news has given cause for concern. Employment figures released on Friday showed 7,700 jobs created, including some 6,300 part-time jobs, far short of levels in previous months.

Canada
We are looking at a very quiet week in terms of Canadian economic news. The first significant news is expected on Thursday morning with the release of the Capacity Utilization Rate for the first quarter of 2012. The market expects capacity utilization to climb to 81.2% from 80.5% in the previous quarter. Then on Friday morning we will have Manufacturing Sales data for April. Here again the market is counting on growth, predicting a 2.2% increase. This compares to 1.9% growth in March.

United States
The week will be much more newsworthy south of the border. Two members of the Fed’s FOMC Committee will be giving speeches on Monday. This will be followed by the release of the Retail Sales figure, which is expected to be down 0.1%, and the Producer Price Index, for which a 0.6% decline from the preceding month is forecast. On Thursday figures will be released on the Consumer Price Index and initial jobless claims. The market expects a slight 0.2% reduction in prices month over month and 378,000 jobless claims. Lastly, the week will end with the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for June. The market expects it to fall to 77.5, from 79.3 for May.

International
In international news, this week we still keep an eye trained on developments in Europe. Over the weekend, a wide range of data were published in China. On Tuesday, Britain will publish its Gross Domestic Product for May. Then on Wednesday Germany will release its Consumer Price Index for May, and on Thursday we will learn the Consumer Price Index for the eurozone.

The Loonie
"Because things are the way they are, things will not stay the way they are." – Bertolt Brecht

Since the turmoil in Europe has been buffeting markets for some time now, market participants have been using different tools to try to determine just how serious the situation is. This week we describe a tool that we use to quantify the risk associated with a country’s sovereign debt and, by extension, the level of uncertainty that market participants associate with that risk. This indicator is the interest rate charged on debt issued by eurozone countries. When a country needs financing, it turns to the financial markets and issues bonds to borrow the funds it needs. The interest rates at which the country borrows are perceived to measure the risk associated with that country. The following graph shows changes in the interest rates charged by the market on 10-year bonds issued by Italy, Spain and Germany over the last year.