It’s about time we start seeing bad data creeping in and giving us a better perception of the true impact of the coronavirus on the global economy. In this respect, recent releases point that new car sales plunged 92% in China in February and the airline traffic is expected to post the first drop since 2011 amid heavy virus containment measures in China and elsewhere took a heavy toll on travel globally.
US stock indices closed Thursday’s session in the red. Most Asian equity markets edged lower on Friday. Korean stocks (-1.05%) led losses on news that coronavirus infections jumped by 52 to 156 cases in South Korea. Nikkei (-0.12%) and the ASX 200 (-0.33%) eased, while stocks in Shanghai (+0.86%) gained on hope that decent monetary and fiscal measures deployed by China could help fighting back the virus impact on the economy.
FTSE (-0.17%) and DAX (-0.29%) futures hint that European indices could extend losses at Friday’s open. With discouraging news hanging on travel headlines, we could expect airline companies and carmakers coming under a decent selling pressure before the weekly closing bell.
British gold miners, on the other hand, should continue benefiting from the relentless rise in gold prices. The ounce of precious metal rose to $1628, a seven-year high, and despite sky-high prices, sellers are nowhere to be found even on risk-positive sessions.
Back to data
News are discouraging, but the US surveys shows no evidence of spillover from the coronavirus outbreak. Yesterday’s data showed that the Philadelphia manufacturing index not only rose unexpectedly but also pointed at a three-year high of 36.7 in February, versus 10.1 expected by analysts and 17.0 printed a month earlier.
The US dollar gained more strength on the back of solid economic data, which has been diverging from data released elsewhere in the world.
One explanation is that, there may be a certain disconnect between sentiment and reality in the US, hence even the US hard data could come as a bad surprise in the coming weeks and take some shine off the positively diverging US dollar. For now, the US dollar index is challenging the 100 level.
In Europe, German producer prices jumped 0.8% in January, versus 0.1% expected by analysts and printed a month earlier, but the consumer index reminded that sentiment in Germany remains sour, mostly due to coronavirus worries.
Due today, the PMI data should confirm a further slowdown in German and European manufacturing and service sectors. If this is the case, the combination of soft European data versus strong US figures should set the stage for a deeper sell-off in euro against the US dollar and the pound. Investors will certainly be looking to strengthen their core short positions on advances above the 1.08 mark versus the greenback and the single currency could extend weakness to 1.0750/1.0730 in the continuation of the presently building negative momentum. The European Central Bank (ECB) meeting accounts renewed call for fiscal stimulus, stating that the monetary policy is ‘not the only game in town’, especially given that European businesses seem quite indifferent regarding rock-bottom interest rates. Happily for the ECB, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has now loosen its purse’s strings to give its economy the necessary support to fight back the coronavirus-triggered weakness. Dovish PBoC will allow many central bankers beside Christine Lagarde to take a deep breather and hope that the Chinese stimulus would have a global positive effect to uplift activity.
Otherwise, the first quarter earnings will likely feel the pinch of subdued activity and could cause at least a temporary and sharp downside correction in near-term stock prices worldwide.
In the UK, investors will monitor through PMI data how much of the post-election optimism has stayed with the ongoing Brexit shenanigans amid a difficult start to bilateral trade negotiations. The services PMI is expected to ease to 53.4 from 53.9 printed previously. The speed and the extent of the readjustment in business optimism should give a hint about how long the positive spillovers of the post-election enthusiasm would last and how much of the early positivity would translate into hard data. Cable fell to 1.2848 on Thursday faced with the US dollar’s solid race. Encouraging data and downside correction in USD could help the pound gaining some field above 1.29.