Good Articles to Share

German business confidence dips in latest recession warning

Tan KW
Publish date: Tue, 24 Sep 2024, 06:00 PM
Tan KW
0 482,343
Good.

Germany’s business outlook worsened again — reinforcing fears that Europe’s biggest economy is in a recession with no quick rebound imminent.

The Ifo Institute’s expectations gauge dipped to 86.3 in September from 86.8 the previous month. That’s still the lowest since February and slightly below what analysts in a Bloomberg poll had seen. A barometer of current conditions declined more strongly.

“The outlook for the coming months continues to decline,” Ifo president Clemens Fuest said Tuesday in a statement, highlighting that the index for manufacturing is at its lowest level since 2020. “The German economy is coming under ever-increasing pressure.”

Talk of Germany’s economic decline is once again growing louder after a string of bad news underscored weaknesses in its key auto sector. The underperformance is weighing on the euro area as a whole, with an early-year recovery in the 20-nation bloc fizzling out.

“The lack of orders has intensified,” Fuest said. “The core sectors of Germany industry are struggling.”

While stressing that a severe economic slump looks unlikely, the Bundesbank has warned that Germany may already be in recession, with another contraction in the third quarter possible after a 0.1% decline in the second. It’s president, Joachim Nagel, will give a speech on the economy later Tuesday.

S&P Global said Monday that its latest Purchasing Managers’ Index for Germany fell more than anticipated, to 47.2 — the lowest level in seven months and well below the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.

The main weak spot remains manufacturing, whose gauge dropped to a one-year low. Services activity, however, also softened.

Economists have already begun lowering this year’s predictions, with some now seeing stagnation or even another slight downturn. Germany was the only Group of Seven economy to contract in 2023.

Its struggles, and the wider implications for the continent, are fuelling market bets that the European Central Bank will cut interest rates again as soon as next month, rather than waiting until December as several officials suggested of late.

“Parts of the euro-area economy are in free fall, others are simply loosing its dynamic — it’s clear that interest rates are too high for investment spending and growth to pick up,” said Karsten Junius, chief economist and head of economic and strategy research at Bank J Safra Sarasin in Zurich.

“The ECB should review the case for front-loading policy rate cuts similar to the Fed,” he said.

 


  - Bloomberg

 

Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 0 of 0 comments

Post a Comment