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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

German Recession Danger Rises As Consumer and Investor Confidence Falls

by Edward Hugh: Palamos (Costa Brava)





Well, I'm supposed to be on holiday at the moment, but since economic events simply refuse to stand still (not even for me, and especially not in Russia), what else can I do. I'm supposed to be resting quietly in that nice building you can see behind the lighthouse (in the photo above), but since German business sentiment and consumer confidence fell more than we might have anticipated in August - thus raising the likelihood that Europe's largest economy may now be steadily slipping into a recession, dragging in the process aggregate Eurozone GDP data along behind it - then here I am sitting sweating it out in a cyber cafe.

Business Climate Worsens In August

The Munich-based Ifo institute's business climate index, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, dropped to a three-year low of 94.8 from 97.5 in July. Ifo's gauge of business expectations dropped to 87, the lowest since February 1993, when Germany was experiencing the worst recession of the past two decades. A measure of current conditions eased to 103.2 from 105.7.





"The German economy is encountering an increasingly more difficult situation,"
Ifo President Hans-Werner Sinn



Consumer Confidence Down Again


At the same time GfK AG's consumer sentiment reading slumped to its lowest level in five years. GfK AG's index for September, based on a survey of about 2,000 people, fell to 1.5, the lowest since June 2003, from a revised 1.9 in August, the Nuremberg-based market-research company said in a statement today.



GfK's sub-index measuring economic expectations plunged to minus 21.8 from minus 8. A measure of consumers' propensity to spend fell to minus 27.9 from minus 26.2 while a gauge of income expectations improved to minus 16.8 from minus 20.


Subdued economic prospects and the expectation of additional price hikes continued to depress consumer sentiment in August. While income expectations recovered slightly from the marked downturn in the prior month, economic expectations were dampened further. The propensity to buy, which in a long-term comparison has been far below average for many months, recorded a further slight reduction.
GFK Press Release




Second Quarter GDP Contraction Confirmed


Further detailed data released today by the Federal Statistics Office confirmed that the German economy contracted in the second quarter, while most of the short term indicators we are now receiving seem to suggest that it may fail to grow in the third quarter as well. While oil prices have receded from a record $147.27 a barrel, they're still up 60 percent over the past year, putting pressure on consumer spending power and just as the slowdown in Southern European economies like Spain and Italy start to weigh heavily on German exports.

The economy contracted 0.5 percent in the three months through June as construction dropped back sharply and companies and households reduced spending, according to the detailed data from the Federal Statistics Office.

Building investment was down 3.5 percent in Q2 from the previous quarter, investment in plant and machinery fell 0.5 percent and consumer spending decreased 0.7 percent. Gross domestic product fell a seasonally adjusted 0.5 percent from the first quarter, when it rose a revised 1.3 percent. The Q2 contraction is the biggest drop since the second quarter of 1998.

Ironically, the headline GDP number was helped by a sharp drop in imports. This drop in imports was the direct result of a weakening in domestic demand (down 0.3% on the quarter), and thus GDP growth was improved by people actually getting worse off.

German exports fell 0.2 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, when they rose 2.1 percent, today's report showed. However imports dropped even further (due to the weak domestic consumer demand) - by 1.3 percent from the first quarter (when they increased by 3.2 percent). So, despite the deterioration in the export situation, the net impact of trade on GDP was positive (0.4 percentage points were added to growth by this effect, or, if you like, without it the contraction would have been around 0.9%) due to the sharp drop`in imports. This result is even stranger than it seems at first sight, since the strong imports in the first quarter meant that trade in Q1 was in fact a negative for GDP (minus 0.3 percentage points) despite the relatively stronger earlier export performance. As the German Federal Statitistics Office Put It:

"However, growth was supported by foreign trade. Compared with the first quarter of 2008, downward trends were recorded for both exports and imports. As, however, imports decreased much more strongly (–1.3%) than exports (–0.2%), the resulting export surplus (net exports) contributed 0.4 percentage points to economic growth."
Weak Performance Looking Forward

According to the most recent PMIs for Germany, performance in the manufacturing sector continues to deteriorate, and manufacturing barely expanded in August:



while services fared a little better, coming in at 53.1, which was slightly up from July's 52.1.




All in all the outlook which seem to hinge on what happens to German imports and exports in August and September. Looking at what just happened in Georgia, and given the dependence of Germany on exports to Russia and the CEE, it is hard to be optimistic at this point about German export growth.