From Japan to Germany, from economic numbers to profit warnings, there’s no shortage of evidence that the world is feeling the pain of a slump in trade.

In Asia, South Korea and Japan reported declines in exports, while European powerhouse Germany is seeing manufacturing shrink the most in six years. Shipping giant Maersk said on Thursday that profit will fall short of expectations, and chief executive Soren Skou said the outlook for this year is bleaker.

A UBS tracker puts global growth at the weakest in a decade, and the worries have overwhelmed central bankers. On Wednesday, minutes of the Federal Reserve’s last policy meeting highlighted slower growth in China and Europe, trade disputes and complications from Brexit.

The European Central Bank was set to publish the account of its January meeting later Thursday, and some officials have already laid the groundwork for a policy response in March. That could include new long-term loans for banks and a change to their language on the outlook for interest rates.

“Uncertainty is the big buzzword for central banks,” Carsten Brzeski, ING Diba chief economist, said on Bloomberg Television. “Maybe if all these external risks turn out benign, then we might see another move by the Fed, another attempt by the ECB to normalise. But judging from today, the probability that all these risks will have a benign outlook is pretty low.”

Bond markets around the world have responded to the weaker outlook. The average yield on securities in the Bloomberg Barclays Global-Aggregate Index fell this week to the lowest since April, and Japanese bond yields dropped to two-year lows on Thursday.

“There is no sense that yields will rise anywhere around the world,” said Takafumi Yamawaki, head of Japan rates and foreign-exchange research at JPMorgan Chase & Co in Tokyo.

That makes this year’s V-shaped recovery in global equity markets all the more striking as traders bet on a resolution to the US-China trade dispute.

In the euro area, the manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index dropped to a level consistent with contraction. IHS Markit, which compiles the report, said the 19-nation economy may struggle to register growth much above 0.1% this quarter.

Orders fell for a second month, with companies citing “global trade protectionism worries, Brexit, the downturn of the auto sector, increased political uncertainty.”

But there were some positives. Services proved a bright spot, and it pushed the overall composite PMI to a three-month high. France also offered some support, reporting a better-than-forecast PMI that may hint at a stabilisation.

For Skou, his peers, and global manufacturing as a whole, the latest figures show that a truce in the US-China trade war can’t come soon enough. The latest reports are that negotiators are working on multiple memorandums of understanding that would form the basis of a final trade deal, though no breakthrough is expected during talks this week.

“We see a world economy that is growing less this year than last year and a lot of trade tensions,” Skou said on Bloomberg Television. “Negotiations are ongoing between the US and China. It seems like they have positive momentum for now but we don’t believe that’s the last of trade tensions because the US also wants to have a discussion with Europe.”

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