Germany: Industrial orders drop in October
The order book deflation in German industry continues
Still no signs of a turnaround for German industry. Hard data cannot yet keep up with the tentative positive signs from soft data. While latest confidence indicators point to a bottoming out, the hard reality looks different. New industrial orders dropped by 0.4% month-on-month in October, from 1.5% in September. On the year, new orders were down by 5.5%. Domestic orders dropped by a whopping 3.2%, while foreign orders increased by 1.5%, driven by a sharp bulk-order-driven 11% increase in orders from Eurozone countries.
The great order book deflation in German industry continues. In fact, it looks as if 2019 wil be the second year in a row in which new orders have fallen. In 2018, orders dropped by 0.4% on average. Currently, 2019 is on track to record a monthly average drop of some 0.6%.
All of this means that the discrepancy between thin order books and high inventories is now bigger than at the start of the mini-recession in 2012 and does not bode well for industrial production in coming months. The trade conflict, global uncertainty and sector-specific shocks (let’s call them ‘cars’) are clearly weighing on German industry. Given the latest announcements from the US government, it should come in handy that German exporters are at least not really known for selling high-quality cheese and champagne.
This publication has been prepared by ING solely for information purposes irrespective of a particular user's means, financial situation or investment objectives. The information does not constitute investment recommendation, and nor is it investment, legal or tax advice or an offer or solicitation to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Read more
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