By Matthew Klein | Friday, May 21
Europe’s Turn to Shine. The world’s second largest economy was hit hard by the
spread of a new Covid-19 variant, a botched vaccination rollout, and new
shutdowns. But things are finally looking up. The proportion of Europeans
getting vaccinated each day has surpassed the rate in the U.S., and the share
of European adults who have received at least one dose is fast
approaching U.S. levels.
It's starting to show up in data. IHS
Markit’s latest survey of purchasing managers at
European manufacturing and services businesses, released today, show that
growth is returning—and fast. The index of new orders hit its highest level
since June 2006. That’s led to a surge in backlogs, with the number of
uncompleted orders rising to its highest level “since that series began in
November 2002.” Similarly, businesses’ optimism about the year ahead is also at
its highest level on record.
Meanwhile, the U.K. and U.S., which had a head
start on vaccinations, are continuing to accelerate. In the U.K., the
composite output index hit its highest level on record, implying “the
fastest rate of growth since the index was first compiled more than two decades
ago.” Similarly, the U.S. readings imply “an unprecedented
expansion in business activity in May” thanks to “the fastest service sector
upturn on record” with manufacturing new orders rising at the sharpest rate on
record.
But while the strong data from the U.S. was
already baked into stock prices, the news out of Europe was not. That may help
explain why the STOXX Europe 600 index gained
0.6% on Friday while the S&P 500 fell 0.1%.
But that’s just one day’s performance. The bond
markets have been following this story for over a month. Longer-term U.S.
Treasury yields peaked at the end of March and have since dropped by about 0.1
percentage point. Over the same period, German Bund yields have increased by
about 0.2 percentage point.
Outside of the tech sector, U.S. stocks did
relatively well, with both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and
the Russell 2000 index of small cap shares up about 0.3%.
But that aggregate number reflects sharp declines in tech shares even as 279 of
the index’s components rose. At the sector level, the biggest winners were
financials, utilities, industrials, materials, and energy, while the worst
performers were technology, consumer discretionary, and communication services.
Gold, silver, copper, and bond yields were all down slightly, while oil was up.
Watch our TV show on Fox Business Fridays at 10 p.m. or
11:30 p.m. ET; Saturdays at 10 a.m. or 11:30 a.m. ET, or Sundays at 7 a.m., 10
a.m. or 11:30 a.m. ET. This week, see Mohamed El-Erian, chief
economic advisor at Allianz.
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DJIA: +0.36% to 34,207.84
S&P 500: -0.08% to 4,155.86
Nasdaq: -0.48% to 13,470.99
The Hot Stock: Ford
Motor Company +6.7%
The Biggest Loser: V.F. Corporation -8.9%
Best Sector: Financials +1.0%
Worst Sector: Technology -0.6%
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