By Jeff
Black - Aug 6, 2013
German
factory orders increased by the most in eight months and U.K. industrial
production beat forecasts in June, adding to evidence of a nascent recovery in
Europe. Italy’s economic contraction slowed.
German
orders, adjusted for seasonal swings and inflation, increased 3.8 percent from
a month earlier, driven by contracts for bulk items, the Economy Ministry in
Berlin said today. Economists forecast a gain of 1 percent in June, according
to the median of 42 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. U.K. output climbed
1.1 percent from May after stagnating for three months, the Office for National
Statistics said in London.
European
Central Bank President Mario Draghi said last week that a “tentative”
stabilization in the 17-nation euro area, which excludes the U.K., is under way
after at least six quarters of contraction. That may benefit Germany, the
region’s biggest economy, as its export-focused manufacturers boost European
sales to counter a slowdown in Asia. The country’s leader, Angela Merkel, faces
parliamentary elections next month.
“The
above-average big-ticket orders mean that the June number overstates the real
economic dynamic,” said Stefan Kipar, an economist at BayernLB in Munich.
“Still, given the discernible upwards movement in the confidence indicators,
continued economic rejuvenation can be expected for the second half of the
year.”
Paris Air
Show
The euro
traded at $1.3275, up 0.1 percent, at 1:45 p.m. in Frankfurt. The pound was
little changed at $1.5359. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.1 percent to
305.09.
German
factory orders advanced 4.3 percent from a year ago, when adjusted for the
number of working days, today’s report showed. Basic-goods and consumer-goods
orders both dropped 0.2 percent from the prior month.
Orders for
investment goods climbed 6.8 percent from May, led by a 20.2 percent gain in
orders from within the euro zone. The increase for the single-currency bloc was
the largest since June 2007 and partly reflects contracts signed at the Paris
Air Show last month, the ministry said.
Pan-European
planemaker Airbus SAS, a unit of European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co.,
received orders for 466 planes worth $69 billion at the Paris Air Show in June
this year. Based on the number of orders and deliveries, Airbus’s first-quarter
book-to-bill ratio on narrow-body jets was the highest since September 2011,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
U.K. Output
“A rebound
in factory orders reflects a recovery in demand for airplanes and ships,” said
Ulrike Rondorf, an economist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “For the second
half of the year, an increase in demand for investment goods would be decisive,
since it would be a sign that entrepreneurs have put the crisis behind them.”
U.K.
industrial production beat the 0.7 percent increase forecast in a Bloomberg
News survey. Factory output jumped 1.9 percent, also exceeding economists’
predictions.
After
expanding 0.6 percent in the second quarter, the U.K. economy is showing signs
of gaining traction, with manufacturing and construction and services all
strengthening in July and house prices rising. Bank of England Governor Mark
Carney will tomorrow present the central bank’s new economic forecasts as well
as officials’ assessment of using forward guidance.
Italy
Recession
“The
strength in manufacturing could be a sign that what has so far been a sugar
rush of low interest rates and rising house prices is broadening out to more
sustainable sources of growth,” said Rob Wood, an economist at Berenberg Bank
in London and a former U.K. central bank official. “The BOE’s job is to ensure
the stimulus is not withdrawn prematurely and this recovery continues to
blossom.”
The euro
area’s emergence from recession isn’t guaranteed. Gross domestic product
probably stagnated in the three months ended June, according to economists
surveyed by Bloomberg last month. The European Union’s statistics office in
Luxembourg reports second-quarter figures on Aug. 14.
Italy’s
recession, the country’s longest since World War II, eased in the period. The
nation’s economy contracted 0.2 percent from the first quarter when it fell 0.6
percent, national statistics institute Istat said in a preliminary report
published in Rome today. Economists predicted a decline of 0.4 percent,
according to the median of 24 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. From a year
earlier, output fell 2 percent.
German
Election
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel will seek a third term as leader on Sept. 22 on the
strength of shielding her country from the worst effects of the region’s debt
crisis. A survey published Aug. 2 by Forschungsgruppe Wahlen showed support for
the opposition Social Democratic party up 1 percentage point to 27 percent,
while Merkel’s Christian Democratic-led bloc slid to 40 percent. An Emnid poll
showed no movement, with Merkel’s party retaining its 15-point lead.
While the
Bundesbank said last month that the German economy expanded “strongly” in the
second quarter, it also warned of signs of a slowdown. The Frankfurt-based
central bank in June cut its 2013 growth outlook to 0.3 percent from 0.4
percent. The economy in China, Germany’s third-biggest trading partner in 2012,
has cooled for the past two quarters.
Continental
AG (CON), Europe’s second-largest car-parts maker, on Aug. 1 scaled back its
sales forecast for this year, saying the region’s tire market isn’t recovering
as expected. Continental now expects revenue to increase 4 percent, down from
an earlier prediction of 5 percent.
At the same
time, Hugo Boss AG (BOSS) reported second-quarter earnings last week that beat
estimates. Sales in Europe climbed 14 percent, beating a 7 percent increase in
Asia. European countries accounted for 69 percent of German exports last year,
while 16 percent of shipments went to Asia, according to the Federal Statistics
Office in Wiesbaden.
“The worst
could be behind us” in the euro region, said Aline Schuiling, an economist at
ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. “The German manufacturing sector should be the
first to profit from a recovery in the euro area, and demand from there is
still more important than that from Asia.”
To contact
the reporter on this story: Jeff Black in Frankfurt at jblack25@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editor responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at
cstirling1@bloomberg.net
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