German factory orders fall after two months of expansion

German factory orders fall after two months of expansion copy

Bloomberg

German factory orders fell after two consecutive months of expansion in a sign that growth in Europe’s largest economy may be steadying after a strong start of the year.
Orders, adjusted for seasonal swings and inflation, dropped 2.1 percent in April, after expanding an upwardly revised 1.1 percent in March, data from the Economy Ministry in Berlin showed on Wednesday. The typically volatile reading compares with a median estimate for a 0.3 percent decline in a Bloomberg survey. Orders were up 3.5 percent from a year earlier, when adjusted for working days.
“Slight upward momentum in output and sales as well as stellar business climate send strong signals for a continuation of the moderate upswing in manufacturing,” the Economy Ministry said in a statement, adding that bulk orders were below average in April. After its best performance in a year in the first quarter, German economic prospects still appear to be positive. Business confidence is at the highest level since 1991 and manufacturers and service providers are seeing the fastest growth in six years. The Bundesbank predicts that the economy will continue to grow at a robust pace in the coming months, supported by “lively” foreign and domestic demand.
In April, orders were damped by a slump in investment-goods demand, primarily from countries outside 19-nation euro area. Consumer -goods orders also fell, while demand for basic goods increased slightly. The report comes one day before the European Central Bank will decide whether the euro-area economy is strong enough after 16 consecutive quarters of uninterrupted growth to signal that unprecedented monetary policy will gradually come to an end. So far, President Mario Draghi has insisted that risks remain tilted to the downside even as the recovery is becoming increasingly robust, and argued that stimulus is still needed to boost inflation.

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