German industrial orders recover in February after sharp drop in January

Reuters  |  BERLIN 

By Michelle Martin

(Reuters) - German industrial picked up in February after plummeting the previous month and the Ministry said an upturn in the sector was on the cards, although a rise in contracts for Germany's factories was weaker than expected.

Contracts rose 3.4 percent on the month, data from the Ministry showed on Thursday. That missed the consensus forecast for a 4.0 percent increase but came after an upwardly revised drop of 6.8 percent in January.

The data comes after a survey that showed manufacturing growth reached its highest level in almost six years in March, driven by an increase in for intermediate goods, suggesting the sector will contribute to an economic expansion in the first quarter.

"The increase in was important - otherwise concerns about production would definitely have been warranted," said Alexander Krueger, economist at Bankhaus Lampe.

"After all the zig-zagging around the turn of the year, the development of seems to have found its way again, but we still have the impression that sentiment indicators have sprinted too far ahead of the real trend," he said.

February's increase was driven by the strongest surge in domestic demand since May 2011, with companies in ordering 8.1 percent more goods than they ordered in January, when they had significantly scaled back

But foreign failed to contribute, with a breakdown showing bookings from the euro zone fell by 2.4 percent while non-euro zone contracts increased by 1.6 percent.

A breakdown of the February data showed demand for intermediate goods soared while appetite for consumer products rose and contracts for capital goods edged up.

The Ministry said that in the less-volatile two-month comparison for January/February compared with November/December, declined by 2.4 percent, with domestic and foreign equally to blame. But it said it expected the industrial sector's performance to improve slightly.

Other recent data has shown unemployment falling, retail sales rising and growth in services accelerating, though engineering were flat in February as domestic dropped.

Forward-looking data has given reason for optimism too, with business morale hitting its highest level in nearly six years and investor morale improving despite the numerous risks that Germany's faces this year - unpredictable elections at home and in France, protectionist trade policies under U.S. President Donald Trump, and Britain's Brexit negotiations.

(Reporting by Michelle Martin, editing by Larry King)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

German industrial orders recover in February after sharp drop in January

BERLIN (Reuters) - German industrial orders picked up in February after plummeting the previous month and the Economy Ministry said an upturn in the sector was on the cards, although a rise in contracts for Germany's factories was weaker than expected.

By Michelle Martin

(Reuters) - German industrial picked up in February after plummeting the previous month and the Ministry said an upturn in the sector was on the cards, although a rise in contracts for Germany's factories was weaker than expected.

Contracts rose 3.4 percent on the month, data from the Ministry showed on Thursday. That missed the consensus forecast for a 4.0 percent increase but came after an upwardly revised drop of 6.8 percent in January.

The data comes after a survey that showed manufacturing growth reached its highest level in almost six years in March, driven by an increase in for intermediate goods, suggesting the sector will contribute to an economic expansion in the first quarter.

"The increase in was important - otherwise concerns about production would definitely have been warranted," said Alexander Krueger, economist at Bankhaus Lampe.

"After all the zig-zagging around the turn of the year, the development of seems to have found its way again, but we still have the impression that sentiment indicators have sprinted too far ahead of the real trend," he said.

February's increase was driven by the strongest surge in domestic demand since May 2011, with companies in ordering 8.1 percent more goods than they ordered in January, when they had significantly scaled back

But foreign failed to contribute, with a breakdown showing bookings from the euro zone fell by 2.4 percent while non-euro zone contracts increased by 1.6 percent.

A breakdown of the February data showed demand for intermediate goods soared while appetite for consumer products rose and contracts for capital goods edged up.

The Ministry said that in the less-volatile two-month comparison for January/February compared with November/December, declined by 2.4 percent, with domestic and foreign equally to blame. But it said it expected the industrial sector's performance to improve slightly.

Other recent data has shown unemployment falling, retail sales rising and growth in services accelerating, though engineering were flat in February as domestic dropped.

Forward-looking data has given reason for optimism too, with business morale hitting its highest level in nearly six years and investor morale improving despite the numerous risks that Germany's faces this year - unpredictable elections at home and in France, protectionist trade policies under U.S. President Donald Trump, and Britain's Brexit negotiations.

(Reporting by Michelle Martin, editing by Larry King)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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