In This Article:
The Majors
It was a mixed month for the European majors, with a final week sell-off reversing gains from earlier in the month.
The DAX30 ended the month up by just 0.02%, while the CAC40 and EuroStoxx600 fell by 3.49% and by 2.98% respectively.
Disappointing economic data from the Eurozone and the U.S, together with a mixed bag on the earnings front weighed late in the month.
Away from the economic calendar, U.S – China tensions and a 2nd wave of the COVID-19 pandemic added to the market angst.
For the European majors, EU member state agreement on the structure of the COVID-19 Recovery Fund had provided some support.
Coupled with news of progress towards a COVID-19 vaccine and positive economic data, the DAX30 had been up by as much as 7% before falling back to sub-13,000 levels.
The Stats
It was a busy month on the Eurozone economic calendar. July’s prelim private sector PMIs and 2nd quarter GDP number were the headline stats of the month.
While June had delivered a less gloomy picture, July delivered a mixed set of stats for the markets to consider.
In the early part of the month, economic data from Germany continued to deliver positive numbers, with factory orders and industrial production seeing further upside.
Mid-month prelim July private sector PMIs from France, Germany, and the Eurozone had also given the majors a boost.
The Eurozone’s Composite PMI rose from 48.5 to 54.8, according to prelim figures.
Late in the month, however, 2nd quarter GDP numbers for France, Germany, and the Eurozone weighed on the majors.
Germany’s economy contracted by 10.10%, France’s by 13.80%, and the Eurozone’s by 12.10% in the quarter.
From the U.S
While nonfarm payrolls, the weekly jobless claims, and private sector PMI numbers had provided support early in the month, it was the weekly jobless claims, consumer confidence, and 2nd quarter GDP numbers that weighed late in the month.
2 consecutive weekly jobless claims increases and a 32.9% contraction in the U.S economy weighed on risk appetite at the month-end.
Consumer confidence also weakened in July as the U.S struggled with a 2nd wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Geopolitics and a failure by the U.S government to pass through the 2nd COVID-19 stimulus package was also market negative.
Monetary Policy
On the monetary policy front, there were no surprises as the ECB left monetary policy unchanged. There had been reports of discord amongst members ahead of the meeting.
The FED also left monetary policy unchanged, while assuring the markets of continued and unwavering support.