German factory orders slump in 2017 but economy continues upward trend

epa06413512 (FILE) - A worker is dwarfed by large steel coils at a furnace of German steel technology group Salzgitter AG in Salzgitter, Germany, 07 March 2017. Media reports on 02 January 2018 state Eurozone manufacturing purchasing managers' index, PMI, scored the figure of 60.6 in December 2017, its best score since 1997 when the surveys were first started. The factories in Europe's single currency area have reported they saw their best monthly performance since the creation of the single currency market, with nations such as Ireland, Austria and Germany reporting a record growth.  EPA-EFE/STEFAN SIMONSEN

Bloomberg

German factory orders fell in November 2017 as demand for investment goods dropped, though the Economy Ministry said the trend remains upward.
Orders, adjusted for seasonal swings and inflation, slid 0.4 percent after a revised 0.7 percent gain in October, the ministry said on Monday.
While the decrease snapped three month of gains, the number is typically volatile and orders were up 8.7 percent from a year earlier.
“Overall, orders in the second half of 2017 developed extremely dynamically. This lays the foundation for a strong start to the year in industry,” the Economy Ministry said in a statement.
“In November, fluctuations in bulk
orders were the main reason for the negative result.”
Monday’s report showed that domestic factory orders fell 0.4 percent in November and those from nations outside the euro zone slid 1.2 percent, while orders from the rest of the currency bloc increased 0.7 percent. The ministry said that despite the most-recent drop in investment orders, the category continues to drive growth in demand.
Germany is in the midst of an economic boom, with exporters benefiting from improving global trade and record-low unemployment buttressing domestic spending. Manufacturing has been leading the expansion in output, with private-sector activity last month hitting the highest level in two decades.
Yet at the same time, and in common with the euro area as a whole, price pressures have failed to build at a similar pace and wages have been slow to rise. Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann has said he expects the state of affairs for pay to change in Germany.
Tighter capacity utilisation and regional labour-market squeezes will lead to “somewhat higher wage pressure,” he told reporters.
Germany’s IG Metall union will resume talks with employers this week as it pushes for a 6 percent pay increase and greater flexibility in working hours for 3.9 million metalworkers and engineers.

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