German economy stagnates in the fourth quarter

Confidence in the German economy slid in February to the lowest level in four year

Germany just barely avoided a recession in the final quarter of 2018
Germany just barely avoided a recession in the final quarter of 2018

Europe’s largest economy stagnated in the fourth quarter as an inventory slump wiped out support from consumption and investment, and business sentiment suggests the weak phase will continue.

Confidence in the economy slid in February to the lowest level in four years after data confirmed Germany just barely avoided a recession. Growth components painted a more upbeat picture - hinting at a pickup in the coming months. Consumer spending, capital investment and public spending all rose in the quarter.

The big drag at the end of last year was inventories, which knocked 0.6 per centage point off GDP. That’s part of the hangover from auto-industry disruption over the summer and reflected carmakers finally shifting stocks.

"Cars have sidetracked the entire economy - however, in a couple of months, the German economy should be able again to show its true colors," said Carsten Brzeski, chief economist at ING Germany. "The German economy is in a better shape than its current reputation."

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Companies' assessment of the current situation as well as expectations dropped, according to a survey by the Ifo Institute.

Economic momentum going forward will depend in large part on how willing companies are to continue investing in an uncertain external environment.

While Germany seems to be overcoming a number of temporary factors that have damped momentum, policy makers are concerned that subdued business expectations may hamper the chances of a rebound.

The slowdown, which has spilled into the wider euro area, has prompted officials to lay the groundwork for a potential monetary-policy response, just months after the European Central Bank halted net bond purchases. Germany's Bundesbank, meanwhile, is still striking a positive tone, arguing there are "no signs that the slowdown is morphing into a downturn.''

That’s despite signs that weakness in manufacturing has persisted into the new year. Purchasing managers’ indexes published Thursday showed a slump in industry, and investor confidence hasn’t yet seen a meaningful pickup. A number of public institutions and private-sector banks have revised down their forecasts for German growth this year.

- Bloomberg