Countries including Germany, France, Ireland, and Italy all reported much better than expected manufacturing numbers.
This is key: One of Europe's biggest (and obvious) headwinds is the drag from austerity. If a robust global recovery and a weak euro can counteract that, and actually propel growth across the region this is huge. If you figure that a stronger-than-expected economy could result in higher-than-expected tax receipts, and thus lower-than-expected deficits, you can begin to piece together a path for the Eurozone, despite its fundamental flaws.
Not surprisingly, European stock markets are turning in really solid gains, with the CAC-40 (France) up over 2%, and the Dax up 1.5%.
Ironically, the big miss in Europe came out of Switzerland, home to the uber-strong Euro-alternative, the Swiss Franc.
Meanwhile, the US ISM is out at 10 AM ET. Expectations are for a 57 reading vs 56.6 last month.
Click here for a full list of European PMIs >
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http://www.businessinsider.com/european-december-pmi-2011-1
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