Data from both sides of the Atlantic will give clues in the coming
week on just how bad the euro zone economy is and just how sustainable
is its U.S. counterpart.
Europe offers a rate meeting from the European Central Bank and a new
slate of economic forecasts; the United States will release its
influential monthly jobs data.
Purchasing manager indexes for the past month will also show how
businesses see things shaping up in the United States and Europe. One
for China’s has already come in lower than expected.
For many, the ECB meeting on Thursday will be the main money event –
despite the fact that it is not likely to be one of action or suspense.
As usual, the attention will be on ECB President Mario Draghi’s
nuances at the news conference that follows the likely non-move on
rates. When it comes to the ECB, the news is often all about the journey
rather than the destination.
This week’s inflation data let the ECB off the hook on taking any immediate additional action to combat the threat of deflation.
At 0.4 percent in October, inflation is worryingly slight, but it is higher than it was a month earlier.
ECB policymakers are also in no rush to move on to something new when
they have not yet seen how their targeted loans and purchases of
asset-backed securities are doing.
Tuesday, November 04, 2014
ECB Gets No Support from Manufacturing All Eyes on Draghi
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