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UNIQA Capital Markets Weekly

UNIQA Capital Markets Weekly © UNIQA Research & Data

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Stabilization at a moderate pace
  • Business and sentiment indicators have stabilized at low levels, a turning point has not yet been fully confirmed by the data.
  • The German economy has avoided a technical recession in Q3 with 0.1 % GDP growth. Manufacturing industries remain in contraction.
  • Growth in CEE countries continues to be above the EU average, being particularly strong in Poland and Hungary.

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Stabilization at a moderate pace
  • Business and sentiment indicators have stabilized at low levels, a turning point has not yet been fully confirmed by the data.
  • The German economy has avoided a technical recession in Q3 with 0.1 % GDP growth. Manufacturing industries remain in contraction.
  • Growth in CEE countries continues to be above the EU average, being particularly strong in Poland and Hungary.

During the third quarter, the Euro Area economy has avoided a further deterioration in economic momentum. GDP growth has been confirmed at 0.2 % (quarter-on-quarter, seasonally adjusted), which is unchanged to the previous quarter. Further, the expected technical recession in Germany (two consecutive quarters of negative q/q GDP growth) has not materialized. The pace of economic expansion seems to have stabilized for now at a moderate, though, positive level.

The German economy, which has fallen from a growth leader to a growth laggard, has expanded by 0.1 % (q/q) in Q3. A recession has been avoided, yet GDP growth in Q2 had to be revised downwards to -0,2 % from previosuly -0,1 %. So far, we only have suggestive evidence regarding the particular drivers of growth in Q3, as details have not yet been released. Destatis, the German Federal Statistical Office, indicated that private consumption, government consumption, net exports and residential investment had a positive effect on economic growth. Non-residential investment, however, further declined. This account is broadly consistent with short-term business cycle indicators (figure 1 - see pdf). Industrial production (-1.1 %, q/q) continued its decline, while retail sales (0.6 %) as well as exports (0.7 %) stepped up compared to the previous quarter.

The manufacturing sector has been the Euro Area’s problem child for some time, while the service sector prevented a more severe deterioration in the economy. From the high in August 2018, Euro Area industrial production has declined by 3 % until July 2019, since when a very moderate improvement has occured (0.5 %). As expected, the decline had been most pronounced for capital goods and least for consumer goods. German industry data show that it might be too early for a turning point to be identified. German industrial production again contracted in September (-1 %, m/m, excl. construction), reaching the lowest level since November 2015. On a three month moving average basis, industrial momentum has improved somewhat lately, yet growth rates remains in negative territory. Irrespective of the type of goods, industrial production remains in contraction (figure 2 - see pdf). The manufacture of pharmaceutical products, electrical equipment and motor vehicles continue to be most exposed. However, the strugge in the German manufacturing sector remains broadbased, as more than half of industries are in decline.

Business sentiment indicators, which tend to lead the business cycle, have stabilized in recent months. German business climate, as measured by the IFO index, has reached a low in August at 94, which is the lowest level since 2012, and has remained quite stable since then (94.6 in October, figure 3 - see pdf). Sentiment indicators, therefore, do not indicate a turning point, thouhg confirm a stabilization at the current moderate pace. Expectations with regard to business development in the next six months have not stepped up either. It was only during the Financial Crisis of 2008/09 that German businesses had a grimmer outlook regarding the near future. Next week’s release of IFO business sentiment indicators for November may already signal a brighter outlook.

Among Euro Area and European Union member states, all economies expanded during the third quarter (figure 4 - see pdf). Besides Germany, also Austria and Italy reported slow growth momentum at 0.1 % (q/q GDP growth, sa). The fastest growing EU member states can be found in CEE. Poland and Hungary, in particular, experienced strong quarter-on-quarter GDP growth at above 1 % (PL: 1.3 %, HU: 1.1 %). The resilience against the German business cycle slowdown, thus, remains surprisingly strong. Our nowcasting tool has predicted a more moderate expansion in Poland, based on weaker industrial production and stagnating construction and retail sales. Potential downward revisions should, therefore, not be ruled out. In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, growth momentum slowed to 0.3 % (CZ) and 0.4 % (SK). Details about the structure of growth will only become available in early December, though, it has been indicated that both domestic and external demand contributed to GDP growth, at least in the Czech Republic. Growth momentum in CEE countries continues to remain above the EU average.

Authors
Martin Ertl                                                Franz Xaver Zobl
Chief Economist                                      Economist
UNIQA Capital Markets GmbH               UNIQA Capital Markets GmbH

Disclaimer
This publication is neither a marketing document nor a financial analysis. It merely contains information on general economic data. Despite thorough research and the use of reliable data sources, we cannot be held responsible for the completeness, correctness, currentness or accuracy of the data provided in this publication.
Our analyses are based on public Information, which we consider to be reliable. However, we cannot provide a guarantee that the information is complete or accurate. We reserve the right to change our stated opinion at any time and without prior notice. The provided information in the present publication is not to be understood or used as a recommendation to purchase or sell a financial instrument or alternatively as an invitation to propose an offer. This publication should only be used for information purposes. It cannot replace a bespoke advisory service to an investor based on his / her individual circumstances such as risk appetite, knowledge and experience with financial instruments, investment targets and financial status. The present publication contains short-term market forecasts. Past performance is not a reliable indication for future performance.

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