U.S. Durable Goods, New Home Sales, Consumer Confidence

 | Jun 25, 2013 05:16AM ET

Today’s data is U.S. heavy, with three housing-related statistics and the week’s main event, durable goods orders. Markets are probably eyeing the end of the week for more speeches from Federal Reserve officials and the European summit.

The Bank of England’s governor Mervyn King gave evidence to the Treasury Committee at 08:30 GMT, and The European Central Bank’s Coeure spokein London at 09:10 GMT. Both Spain and Italy are holding auctions. After markets close, the U.S. Treasury Secretary will speak at 21:00 GMT.

U.S. May Durable Goods Orders (12:30 GMT). Total orders are expected to have risen by 3.2 percent in May from a year ago, almost unchanged from 3.3 percent in April, but the headline number is notoriously volatile and the series has moved in a sideways manner since late 2011. Attention should be paid to the core excluding transportation and defence, but with already-reported low industrial production and weakness in manufacturing purchasing manager indices, a positive core number is not probable. With the Federal Reserve’s taper-talk, Zero Hedge reminds us that bad news are now bad for the market, as weakness in the real economy will not be countered by additional measures from the Fed. Business Insider featured a long-term chart on durable goods spending as a share of gross domestic production, which showed that the ratio is at 60-year lows, suggesting that there is plenty of room for growth in fixed investments. For now, there is no sign of a break higher, so it is safe to assume a continuation of the recent range, and note the recent disconnect between the "hard data" and the stock market. The economy should come up with a positive surprise, or markets will soon be disappointed.