06:37 AM EDT, 10/24/2024 (MT Newswires) -- The eurozone PMI has been on the decline since June, causing doubts about an already frail economic recovery from the energy crisis, said ING.
So much so that the European Central Bank has decided to pick up the pace in terms of rate cuts. Listening to ECB President Christine Lagarde at the latest press conference, she seemed to put a lot of weight on the deterioration of survey data in explaining the decision to cut rates in October, wrote the bank in a note to clients.
That makes Thursday's release all the more relevant for markets, which are increasingly pricing a 50bp cut for December, stated ING. At the International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington, hawks have been pushing back against a 50bps cut if economic circumstances don't deteriorate much further.
This mostly indicates that the pace of cuts remains very much open ahead of the following meetings.
The composite PMI remained broadly stable on Thursday, increasing from 49.6 to 49.7 in October.
The PMI was slightly up thanks to an easing contraction in manufacturing, hardly something to cheer about since the manufacturing sector has been in contraction since late 2022. The services sector continues to drive economic growth for now, but the survey did note a further weakening of new orders for the sector.
This means that the outlook for the economy remains sluggish at best for the foreseeable future, with businesses responding by reducing headcount according to the survey, added the bank. The weakening economy and sluggish incoming demand also mean that the inflation environment remains benign according to the survey.
At the same time, hard data on July and August hasn't been all too bad, which means that gross domestic product growth in Q3 could surprise on the upside, pointed out ING.
With survey data continuing to come in weak though, this may prove to be a dead cat bounce. For the ECB, the debate about how fast to move to neutral will no doubt be heated ahead of the December meeting, according to the bank.