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Week Ahead: Covid-19 to hit sentiment, can discounters thrive?

May 24, 2020
5 min read
Table of Contents
  • 1. German confidence heading higher? UK, NZ sentiment predicted to drop further 
  • 2. Flash CPI: Germany and Eurozone 
  • 3. US durable goods orders to collapse further, unemployment to hit spending 
  • 4. Japan unemployment rate, flash industrial production, retail sales 
  • 5. Earnings: Discounters expected to fare well on consumer stockpiling 

A raft of sentiment data, US goods orders figures, and earnings from discounters well-positioned to thrive during the current economic downturn will be the focus of financial markets in the week ahead. Here’s your full break-down of the top events to watch. 

German confidence heading higher? UK, NZ sentiment predicted to drop further 

There is plenty of sentiment data available this week, with the German Ifo Business Climate, GfK Consumer Sentiment surveys for Germany and the UK, the US CB Consumer Confidence report, and the latest ANZ Business Confidence survey for New Zealand in the docket. 

The mood is expected to have improved in Germany, where lockdowns were lighter to begin with and so the expected economic hit shouldn’t be so severe. Schools and small businesses have reopened, and the return to some kind of normality is expected to lift sentiment from its historic lows. 

It will be a different story in the UK, where the bulk of restrictions remain in place. A sharp rise in unemployment will also weigh on sentiment, with even workers shielded by the government’s furlough scheme left uncertain about their future once the Treasury stops paying their wages. 

Meanwhile, although the New Zealand economy has reopened, the latest ANZ confidence survey is expected to show another weakening in business sentiment.  

This may not truly reflect the current mood, however, as the government last week announced fiscal stimulus equal to over 20% of GDP to jump-start growth, and predicted a return to pre-Covid-19 levels of joblessness within two years. 

Flash CPI: Germany and Eurozone 

The collapse in oil prices and the continued stimulus efforts of the European Central Bank will weigh on the latest inflation figures from Germany and the Eurozone this week. 

Price growth in the Eurozone slumped from 0.7% to a four-year low of 0.3% in April, finalised data last week confirmed. The collapse in crude oil prices was largely to blame; the more stable core reading slipped to 0.9% from 1% year-on-year. Food, alcohol, and tobacco prices rose. 

While many of the Eurozone’s major economies slipped into deflation, price growth remained firmer in Germany. Another bout of data like that this week could fuel further tensions between the Eurozone’s powerhouse and its central bank, who were arguing over the legality of its asset purchasing programme. 

US durable goods orders to collapse further, unemployment to hit spending 

US durable goods orders tumbled in March. Orders plunged –14.4% on the month, with a collapse in transport orders, particularly commercial aircraft, largely responsible. 

Forecasts for April suggest a further –25% decline. Personal income and spending figures later in the week could also show another large drop. Income declined -2% on the month during March, while spending dropped a record –7.5% as people complied with stay-at-home orders. With 20 million Americans losing their jobs in April, the next set of income figures is likely to show a larger collapse. 

Japan unemployment rate, flash industrial production, retail sales 

A slew of data from Japan on Friday will give a broad view of how the economy is faring, although we already know it’s in a recession. Unemployment is expected to have climbed to 3.2% during April, from 2.5% in March. Retail is expected to continue to shrink on the month, with the rate of decline slowing from –4.5% to –3.2%. Preliminary industrial production data will show whether the –5.2% year-on-year decline recorded in March moderated last month. 

Earnings: Discounters expected to fare well on consumer stockpiling 

Discounters Costco, Dollar General, and Dollar Tree all report earnings this week. Consumers rushed to buy the essentials during Q1 and tightening budgets and surging jobless rates could help drive demand in the long run. 

Costco, however, has other business interests that may continue to feel the pain of the stalling economy and social-distancing measures; stagnation in its food courts, travel services, and optical services wings dragged comparable sales down –4.7% on the year in April, even as demand for consumer staples surged. 

Dollar Tree announced that it would bring on an additional 25,000 staff to help it cope with the increased demand in its stores and distribution centres. Earnings will take a knock from the decision to suspend online sales for seven days towards the end of March, which hit revenue by almost 20% during the period. Online is where other retailers like Walmart have been able to make up for falling instore sales volumes. 

Dollar General is the clear winner in terms of stock performance, having gained 16% since the start of the year. Costco is nearly 5% higher, while Dollar Tree, which performed well during the last recession, has slumped nearly 15%. Goldman Sachs initiated the stock as a “Buy” last week.

Heads-Up on Earnings 

The following companies are set to publish their quarterly earnings reports this week:

Pre-Market27-MayRoyal Bank of Canada
After-Market27-MayAutodesk – Q1 2021
After-Market27-MayWorkday Inc – Q1 2021
Pre-Market28-MayDollar Tree – Q1 2020
14.00 UTC28-MayDollar General – Q1 2020
After-Market28-MaySalesforce – Q1 2021
After-Market28-MayCostco Wholesale Corp – Q3 2020
After-Market28-MayDell Technologies – Q1 2021

 

Highlights on XRay this Week 

17.00 UTC25-MayBlonde Markets
15.30 UTC26-MayWeekly Gold Forecast
10.00 UTC27-MayThe Marketsx Experience: Platform Walkthrough
14.45 UTC28-MayMaster the Markets with Andrew Barnett
12.25 UTC29-MayUS PCE: Live Market Analysis

 

Key Economic Events

Watch out for the biggest events on the economic calendar this week:

08.00 UTC25-MayGerman Ifo Business Climate
06.00 UTC26-MayGerman GfK Consumer Climate
14.00 UTC26-MayUS CB Consumer Confidence
01.30 UTC27-MayAustralia Construction Work Done (Q1)
01.00 UTC28-MayNew Zealand ANZ Business Confidence
01.30 UTC28-MayAU Private Capital Expenditure (QoQ)
12.00 UTC28-MayGermany Preliminary CPI
12.30 UTC28-MayUS Durable Goods Orders
14.30 UTC28-MayUS EIA Natural Gas Storage
15.00 UTC28-MayUS EIA Crude Oil Inventories
23.01 UTC28-MayUK GfK Consumer Confidence
23.30 UTC28-MayJapan Unemployment Rate, Flash Industrial Production, Retail Sales
09.00 UTC29-MayEurozone Flash Inflation
12.30 UTC29-MayCanada GDP (Q1)
12.30 UTC29-MayUS PCE, Personal Income, Personal Spending

Risk Warning: this article represents only the author’s views and is for reference only. It does not constitute investment advice or financial guidance, nor does it represent the stance of the Markets.com platform.When considering shares, indices, forex (foreign exchange) and commodities for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice. Trading cryptocurrency CFDs and spread bets is restricted for all UK retail clients. 

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Table of Contents
  • 1. German confidence heading higher? UK, NZ sentiment predicted to drop further 
  • 2. Flash CPI: Germany and Eurozone 
  • 3. US durable goods orders to collapse further, unemployment to hit spending 
  • 4. Japan unemployment rate, flash industrial production, retail sales 
  • 5. Earnings: Discounters expected to fare well on consumer stockpiling 

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