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Today in Germany, we receive the Ifo indicator for November. The PMI released on Friday surprised on the downside, although this mainly seems like an "adjustment" from very high numbers in the past months.
Today in Germany, we receive the Ifo indicator for November. The PMI released on Friday surprised on the downside, although this mainly seems like an "adjustment" from very high numbers in the past months. Even after the decline the composite PMI is still at the highest level in one and a half years when excluding the October reading.
On Wednesday, we will keep an eye on the UK as Chancellor Reeves presents the Autumn budget. Gilts and GBP will be sensitive to how an inevitable fiscal tightening looks and whether the fiscal gap is plugged sufficiently. Markets soured on the UK when Reeves recently scrapped plans to hike the income tax rate.
On Thursday, we look for euro area credit growth data and Danish retail sales for October. Regarding retail sales, our Spending Monitor showed a 0.6% m/m decline in real retail spending in October, and we expect spending growth to remain muted.
Rounding off the week, we receive the flash estimates of inflation in Germany, France, Italy, and Spain which together will reveal almost entirely how inflation in the euro area fared ahead of the aggregate data next week.
What happened overnight
In the Ukraine war, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that peace talks in Geneva "showed meaningful progress" but declined to share details. On Sunday, US President Donald Trump urged Ukraine to accept the 28-point plan, blaming Ukraine and Europe for the lack of a truce.
In the euro area, November PMIs were close to expectations with the composite PMI falling marginally to 52.4 from 52.5 in October (cons: 52.5). The manufacturing PMI declined to 49.7 from 50.0 (cons: 50.1) and the services PMI climbed to 53.1 from 53.0 (cons: 52.8). The price indices showed an uptick in input prices and marginal decline in output prices. Inflation remains under control and risk has shifted from inflation being too high to instead being too low. With growth still holding up, we expect the ECB to be on hold at 2.0% in the coming year despite inflation forecasted to fall below the 2% target.
The ECB's indicator of negotiated wages declined by more than expected to 1.9% y/y in Q3 (cons: 2.5 y/y) compared to 4.0% y/y in Q2 and 2.5% y/y in Q1. A faster-than-expected decline in wages is a downside risk to our outlook of unchanged ECB policy rates, as it would lower services inflation which is the main category holding overall inflation up.
In the US, New York Fed President John Williams said that he still saw "room for further adjustment", backing a cut at the next meeting in December. Markets are now pricing about a 60% likelihood of a rate cut in December. Meanwhile, Fed vice chair Philip Jefferson and Boston Fed President Susan Collins did not really comment on the near-term rate outlook and Dallas Fed President Logan reiterated her earlier view that she would find it difficult to cut rates in December.
November flash PMIs landed close to expectations. The manufacturing PMI declined to 51.9 from 52.5 in October and appeared weaker than the headline index suggests. The order-inventory balance turned sharply lower to 46.1 from 49.5 and all else equal, weaker order-inventory predicts weaker output growth as well. Services PMI on the other hand increased to 55.0 from 54.8 in October, with both new orders and price indices turning higher. Overall, the flash print was a mixed bag for the Fed, with some concerning signals surrounding the manufacturing growth momentum.
Equities: Equities stabilized on Friday after several unsuccessful attempts earlier in the week. The S&P 500 finally closed 1% higher, Russell 2000 gained a full 3%, while European Stoxx 600 edged 0.3% lower. Importantly, this was not a rebound led by last week's most-sold names. Instead, markets saw a selective rotation, with investors refraining from buying the dip in the most heavily sold AI names (or in Bitcoin for that matter, down -2% on Friday despite -20% over the last month). Rather, it was small caps and sectors such as materials, healthcare, and consumer discretionary that fared the best. Similarly, we are not seeing the rebound spread to the AI hardware region – Asia – this morning, although European and US futures are higher.
A selective rebound makes sense to us, as last week's selloff was unusual – not in magnitude, but in the fact that the drawdown in equities was not synchronized with other asset classes. While the S&P 500 is 4% off its highs, yields, copper prices, gold, and credit spreads are little changed. We interpret this as a sign that the November selloff is neither macro-driven nor liquidity related. As such, the fundamental read-across to equities outside the AI theme – such as European markets – should be limited.
Is this a buying opportunity then? In a sense, yes. We remain positive on equities on a 3-6 months horizon with a slight equity overweight stance. However, the fact that the equity selloff has not been mirrored in other asset classes also means that positioning support remain absent. Investors have not panicked into bonds – quite the opposite, according to November's fund manager survey, which showed extremely low cash levels. Our correction monitor, which tracks indicators such as the VIX, CTA hedge fund beta, or bull-bear spreads, is far from oversold conditions. As such, we are refraining from increasing the equity overweight further for now.
FI and FX: Dovish comments from Fed's dove Williams sent US rates lower – UST10y from 4.15% to 4.05% – and raised the probability of a December cut to 16bp from a 7bp low after the FOMC Minutes. It supported risk sentiment and lifted equities to a decent c. +1% close after a rough week. Equity futures are in green this morning, while Japan is closed for holiday. The USD's outperformance pulled EUR/USD toward 1.1500. EUR/SEK and EUR/NOK trade around 11.00 and 11.80, respectively.

The Pound US Dollar (GBP/USD) exchange rate fell over a cent last week, as hawkish Federal Reserve interest rate expectations and a cautious market mood turbocharged USD demand.
Latest — Exchange Rates:
Pound to Dollar (GBP/USD): 1.30964 (-0.01%)
Euro to Dollar (EUR/USD): 1.15105 (-0.03%)
Dollar to Japanese Yen (USD/JPY): 156.5935 (+0.13%)
WEEKLY RECAP:
The US Dollar (USD) strengthened through the first half of last week, underpinned by a cautious market mood.
This risk-off sentiment was triggered by equity market jitters and concerns over global growth, and drove investors towards safe-haven assets like the 'Greenback'.
The upside in USD was then compounded through the middle of the week, with the release of the minutes from the Fed's latest policy meeting.
The minutes showed that most policymakers are resistant to further easing, leading the odds for a December rate cut from the US central bank to fall dramatically.
This momentum then carried through into the latter half of the week, with the release of the latest non-farm payroll data.
September's delayed data showed the US economy added 119,000 jobs, smashing forecasts and cementing bets that a December rate cut is likely off the table.
The Pound (GBP) struggled to put up much resistance against the US Dollar last week amid a run of lacklustre UK economic releases.
The most notable pressure came with the release of the UK's consumer price index, which reported the first fall in inflation in five months and ramped up expectations the Bank of England (BoE) will press ahead with a December rate cut.
Underwhelming data at the end of the week also proved a headache for Sterling, as it reported a slowdown in the UK's vital services sector in November, as well as a surprise contraction in retail sales in October.
On top of this, GBP sentiment was also undermined throughout the session by a sense of caution ahead of the UK's autumn budget.
The Pound US Dollar exchange rate is poised for a potentially volatile week, with the UK's highly anticipated autumn budget expected to dominate headlines.
Sterling will likely drift sideways until Wednesday, as traders hold off on major positions before seeing Reeves's fiscal priorities. Reaction to her proposals is then set to define GBP/USD's next moves.
If the budget raises doubts – whether due to limited detail, an emphasis on tax increases or insufficient reassurance for bond investors – the Pound could risk striking new multi-month lows.
Meanwhile, the coming week will see the release of a number of US economic indicators previously delayed by the US government shutdown, with the US Dollar potentially faltering if they also surprise to the upside, similarly to the payrolls figures.
European Union ministers are set to urge top U.S. trade officials on Monday to apply more of the July EU-US trade deal, such as by cutting U.S. tariffs on EU steel and removing them for EU goods such as wine and spirits.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will meet EU ministers responsible for trade on their first trips to Brussels since taking office.
The EU ministers plan to discuss pressing trade issues, including Chinese rare earth and chip exports restrictions, and host Lutnick and Greer for 90 minutes over lunch.
Under the end-July deal, the United States set 15% tariffs on most EU goods, while the European Union agreed to remove many of its duties on U.S. imports.
That may only happen in March or April, given it requires approval from the European Parliament and EU governments, which EU diplomats say has exasperated Washington.
But while insisting the process is on course, the 27-nation bloc is also pointing to agreed items on which it wants to see progress, chief among them steel and aluminium.
The United States has a 50% tariff on the metals and since mid-August has applied this to the metal content in 407 "derivative" products such as motorcycles and refrigerators. More derivatives may be added next month.
EU diplomats say that such actions, along with the prospect of new tariffs on trucks, critical minerals, planes and wind turbines, threaten to hollow out the July accord.
"We're at a delicate moment," one EU diplomat said. "The U.S. is looking for reasons to criticise the EU as we are trying to get them to work on steel and other unresolved matters."
The bloc additionally wants a broader range of its products subject only to low pre-Trump duties. These could include wine and spirits, olives and pasta.
The EU is also ready to discuss areas of possible regulatory cooperation, such as covering cars, the bloc's proposed purchases of U.S. energy and joint efforts on economic security, particularly in response to Chinese export controls.
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