Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Head of Macroeconomic Research
Summary: The results of the S&P flash PMI indicators for the eurozone showed activity continued to rise in both the services and the manufacturing sectors. But there are still signs of uncertainty related to record-high inflation and supply issues impacting domestic demand in the medium term. The PMI indicators do not confirm any imminent risk of technical recession in the eurozone.
Despite a tightening in financial conditions, increased geopolitical risk due to the Ukraine war, a lower euro exchange rate which increases imported inflation and lower fiscal stimulus in most countries, the eurozone economic recovery continues this Spring but at a slower pace than in 2021 and in early 2022. Eurozone activity in the services sector slowed to a 2-month low of 56.3 versus 57.7 in April. Pent-up pandemic demand explains most of the momentum with a surge in spending on tourism and recreation, in particular. As factories were constrained by widespread supply shortages resulting from the Ukraine war and China’s lockdowns, the manufacturing PMI decreased to a 18-month low of 54.4 versus 55.5 in April. On a positive note, the sector continued to report solid hiring. Though it may not last if inflationary pressures remain in place most of this year (at some point, factories will need to further cut costs, including labor cost). The latest PMI data are consistent with the eurozone economy growing at a solid quarterly rate of 0.6% so far in the second quarter. This is obviously disappointing (remember that many economists expected the start of a second Roaring Twenties after the Covid pandemic ended in Spring 2021). But given all the risks facing the economy, this is an overall positive and encouraging performance.
Key details from the flash PMI report: