Slowing Europe
In Europe, the latest data released yesterday showed that growth and industrial production slowed, but slowed less than expected, while employment deteriorated less than expected – giving the European Central Bank (ECB) a good reason to continue its fight against inflation. But on a microscopic level, the Ifo said that Germany's skilled worker pool is worsening. The Netherlands unexpectedly slipped into recession after showing two straight quarter contraction, and Eastern Europe continues feeling the pinch of Ukrainian war; the Polish economy printed a 3.7% contraction. Plus, Europe's got a China problem. The European luxury goods have been supporting a rally in the European stocks as a result of higher Chinese purchases of the luxury products. But the souring economic conditions in China, falling home prices, rising unemployment and deteriorating sales growth weigh on valuations of companies like LVMH and Hermes. The Stoxx 600 is getting ready to test the 200-DMA, near 453, to the downside, and trend and momentum indicators hint that a deeper selloff could be on the European stocks' menu this quarter.
On the currency front, the weak data – even though it was stronger-than-expected, combined with a broad-based surge in the US dollar, kept the EURUSD below the 100-DMA yesterday, near 1.0930. The pair fell to the lowest levels since the beginning of July and the strengthening bearish momentum calls for a deeper downside correction. The next natural target for the EURUSD bears stands at 1.0790, the 200-DMA. The ECB will likely keep its hawkish stance unchanged, but when the Fed hawks step in, the other central bank hawks just need to wait before their hawkishness is reflected in market pricing