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• Slightly better-than-expected December EMU PMI’s showed business activity decreasing for the second month running. The rate of contraction was slower than in November though (49.5 from 48.3). A modest return to growth of services (51.4 from 49.5) was unable to erase the continuing downturn in manufacturing (45.2; unchanged). As has now been the case for several months, the overall reduction in business activity was reflective of falls in Germany and France. Both remained in contraction during December while the rest of the EMU posted a solid increase in output at the end of the year (6-month high). Overall, economic output was scaled back amid sustained reductions in new orders. Meanwhile, the pace of job cuts was the fastest in four years as companies responded to a drop in workloads by lowering their staffing levels (mainly manufacturing, near stagnation in services). EMU manufacturers reduced their purchasing activity again, with the sharp decline in input buying the most pronounced of any month in 2024. Further marked declines in inventories of both purchases and finished goods were also registered. Optimism in the 12-month outlook for output strengthened, but only marginally and coming off low levels. Rates of inflation of both input costs and output prices quickened at the end of the year, with charges rising at a pace that remained above the series average. These developments back the ECB’s “safe” 25 bps rate cut last week. ECB President Lagarde today said that she expected to lower interest rates further. Interestingly, she believes that price momentum in the services sector has dropped steeply recently. An ECB tracker sees wage growth slowing to about 3% next year, a level the central bank generally considers to be consistent with the 2% target. Recall that most recent (Q3) wage data showed EMU high wage inflation at 5.4% Y/Y. Risks to the inflation outlook became two-sided, but are clouded by a huge amount of (geo)political and economic uncertainty. EUR/USD reacted stoic to today’s European numbers with EUR/USD moving up and down the 1.05 handle. Friday night’s unexpected French credit rating downgrade by Moody’s (Aa3 from Aa2, stable outlook) didn’t pull the single currency down neither, even though French credit risk premia added a few bps and with the CAC40 underperforming (-0.90%) EMU stock markets. Core bonds try a modest rebound after last week’s weakness with German yields currently 3.7 bps (2-yr) to 1.5 bps (30-yr) lower. We witness some USD strength and Treasury weakness as we finish this report following December US PMI’s. US output growth ends 2024 on 33-month high (56.6 from 54.9) amid a service sector surge (58.5 from 56.1), but manufacturers report falling output (48.3 from 49.7) and higher prices.
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