Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet

Last Week

We got a lot of data and central bank speak last week, but not a lot changed from a macro standpoint—except we were reminded that the U.S. economic rebound remains very much intact, despite mixed data. And, that was an incremental positive late in the week.

Despite that strong finish, things were ugly to start last week. Retail sales slightly missed expectations, falling     -0.3% vs. (E) -0.1%. The “control” group, which is retail sales less autos, gasoline and building materials, met expectations, declining -0.2%. But the previous month was revised lower, from a +0.4% gain to just a +0.2% gain.

Also early last week Empire State manufacturing, which is the first data point from October, plunged, dropping 6.17 vs. (E) 20.50. New orders, the leading indicator in the report, went negative for the first time in months.

And, despite retail sales being just a small miss and Empire State being historically volatile and not very correlated to national manufacturing activity—in a market that was nervous about growth everywhere—these disappointing reports definitely contributed to the stock market declines, as people (inappropriately) began to get nervous about U.S. growth.

But, the data late in the week helped calm some nerves. Industrial production beat expectations (up +1% vs. (E) +0.4%), the manufacturing subcomponent (which is the important part of the release) was a slight beat, and Philly Fed stayed strong (20.7 vs. (E) 20.0) and importantly contradicted and potentially invalidated the bad Empire State report. Finally, weekly jobless claims plunged to a 14-year low, which helped sentiment.

Again, bottom line was the data were mixed and the negative market reaction to the early-week “misses” was more a reflection of overall nervousness—not that the data were that “bad.“

Looking at the Fed, there was a lot made about “dovish” comments by Bullard and Williams (especially the Bullard comments).

But, neither one reflects the “core” of the FOMC. Although Fed Funds futures continue to push out the expected date of the first rate hike (now December 2015), the Fed will almost certainly end QE at the meeting next week.

This Week

This week is all about the October global flash PMIs, plain and simple. Chinese numbers come Wednesday night, while European and U.S. numbers come Thursday morning. Given that worry about global growth is the main negative influence on markets right now, these numbers are the next major catalysts for markets.

In China, the main focus is whether the flash PMIs can hold 50 (if they can, it’ll be a mild positive). In Europe, it’s the same question (can they hold 50?). Sentiment is so negative toward Europe right now, it’ll take a pretty bad number to make the outlook there materially worse. Finally in the U.S., the market will be looking for further evidence that, despite global issues and a stronger dollar, the manufacturing sector is continuing to expand at a decent pace.

After the flash PMIs, the next most important number to watch is the September CPI, out Wednesday. As you know, growth and dis-inflation are the two concerns in the market right now. Obviously the PMIs give us a glimpse into growth, and the CPI will give us a glimpse into the dis-inflation. A bounce back toward that 2.0% yoy increase in core CPI will be very welcomed by the market, if it occurs.

Third in importance this week are the Chinese economic data coming tonight: GDP, IP and Retail Sales. China’s been put slightly to the back burner with all this Europe worry, but growth there needs to maintain pace. If concern grows that China may not be able to maintain 7.0% annual GDP growth, this will be an added negative on the market.

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