German business confidence held steady in May after falling for five straight months, a survey showed yesterday, suggesting company executives in Europe’s biggest economy are keeping their cool despite the possibility of a global trade war.
The Munich-based Ifo economic institute said its business climate index held steady at 102.2 after revising up the April reading from an initial 102.1. The May reading slightly beat a Reuters consensus forecast for a reading of 102.0.
An economist at Ifo said the domestic economy, particularly trade, construction and services, had been largely responsible for the stabilisation, while there was “no euphoria” in the export sector which has historically propelled the economy.
“The downward trend has stopped,” Ifo economist Klaus Wohlrabe told Reuters. “The global economic environment is difficult, but the German economy is holding its ground.”
But Andreas Scheuerle, economist at DekaBank, disagreed, saying the trend had not yet changed and added: “The news that is currently raining down on companies really does not lend itself to creating a positive mood.”
He pointed to the possibility of US import tariffs on autos and concerns about Italy’s new government, and said that news had come towards the end of the survey period so would not weigh on the index until next month.
Illustrating the challenging international environment for German exporters, Thyssenkrupp, which makes everything from chemical plants and car parts to submarines and steel, last week cut the profit margin forecast for its capital goods business, blaming a strong euro and higher material costs.
Germany, a major exporter, faces a host of risks including the prospect of US import tariffs on aluminium and steel, a potential global trade war and the possibility that German firms conducting business in Iran will face sanctions after the US decision to back out of the nuclear deal with Tehran. “The number of dark clouds in the German economic sky has clearly increased,” ING economist Carsten Brzeski said, pointing to higher oil prices, trade tensions and Italian politics.
“Add to this the political reluctance to speed up new structural reforms and both public and private investments and it becomes obvious that the German growth story is running on its last leg.”
But Stephen Brown at Capital Economics was more optimistic, saying the stabilisation was encouraging and gave reason to hope economic growth might pick up to 0.6% in the second quarter.
Other recent data has painted a negative picture, showing private sector growth at its lowest in more than 1-1/2 years, investor morale remaining at its weakest level in more than five years and the mood among consumers hitting its lowest this year.
Economic output slowed to 0.3% in the first quarter, down from 0.6% in late 2017 but the finance ministry says the economy is still in a strong upswing.
The government expects a 2.3% expansion this year but the Bundesbank says underlying economic momentum is likely to have weakened.
The Ifo survey showed that German managers were more satisfied with their current business situation but felt more downbeat about their prospects for the coming months.
A breakdown showed sentiment deteriorating in the manufacturing sector while it picked up in services, trade and construction.




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