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“We suspect that there is still appreciable reluctance within the ECB’s Governing Council to engage in full blown QE, so it will only occur if the euro zone returns to recession and consumer price inflation trends down further,” Archer said.
In Germany, factory activity shrank for the first time in 15 months in September, suggesting the engine of the euro zone economy may be running out of steam. In France, the sector contracted for the fifth month running.
France defied its European Union partners on Wednesday with a 2015 budget setting out how it would bring its borrowing back to within EU limits two years later than promised, a retreat it blamed on a fragile economy.
In Britain, manufacturing grew at the slowest rate in 17 months in September as demand weakened at home and in Europe, a factor likely to be noted by the Bank of England next week as it assesses how soon it should start raising interest rates.
The downturn extended to Asia, with China’s official PMI of activity staying stuck at 51.1 in September, only modestly above the 50 level that separates growth from contraction.
China cut mortgage rates and downpayment levels this week for some home buyers for the first time since the global financial crisis, escalating efforts to boost an economy threatened by the sagging housing market.
In India, factory activity expanded at its most sluggish pace this year in September on slowing new orders and output growth, while in South Korea, manufacturing activity shrank, fuelling doubts over the strength of its economic recovery.
With manufacturers worldwide struggling, demand fears sent oil prices to their lowest in more than two years this week, iron ore a five-year trough and copper a four-month low - all likely to intensify disinflation risks in Asia and Europe.
The U.S. manufacturing industry expanded in September, though at a slower pace than in August, while employment in the sector grew at its best pace since March 2012, according to financial data vendor Markit on Wednesday.
Markit’s final U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index for September slipped to 57.5 last month from 57.9 in August.
“The September PMI reading, in fact, rounds off the strongest quarter recorded by the survey since the financial crisis, narrowly beating the previous peak seen when the economy was rebounding from recession in the second quarter of 2010,” Markit chief economist Chris Williamson said.
“GDP looks set to grow by at least 3.0 percent in the third quarter, with good momentum being sustained as we move into the final quarter of the year,” he said.
An alternative gauge of U.S. manufacturing from the Institute of Supply Management also showed the pace of growth slowing in September.
Expansion in the Canadian manufacturing sector slowed in September, too, with a Markit/RBC PMI index reading of 53.5, pulling back from the nine-month high of 54.8 seen in August.
In Mexico, factory activity expanded at a faster pace though with the Markit/HSBC PMI index rising to an eight-month high, in a sign that Latin America’s No. 2 economy could pick up speed.
Mexico exports mostly manufactured goods and sends nearly 80 percent of its exports to the United States. Analysts expect the economy to expand by about 2.5 percent this year, with growth picking up after a weak start to the year.
However, in Latin America’s No. 1 economy, Brazil’s manufacturing activity contracted in September for the fifth time in six months as a limping economy and uncertainty over Sunday’s presidential election led businesses to put off purchases of new capital goods, the Markit/HSBC survey showed.
The HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index for the Brazilian manufacturing sector BRPMIM=ECI fell to a seasonally adjusted 49.3 in September from 50.2 in August.