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Midst a steady drumbeat of weak-to-negative economic news out of the Euro-zone
in the past few days, there was one report today that gives particular cause
for concern - German manufacturing orders. Germany has been the 'zone's economic
powerhouse in the past few quarters, continuing to see steady-to-strong GDP
growth even as demand and output started to weaken, or even outright slide,
in France, Italy, and Spain. However, falling demand from the neighbors is
starting to take a toll.

German manufacturing orders dropped a steeper-than-expected 2.9% s.a. on the
month in June and were down 6.1% on the year. One month of weakness may not
be so unusual - after all, orders crashed for a month at the start of Q3 2007,
then quickly picked up again. But the trend is disconcerting. This was the
seventh straight monthly decline, the longest series of declines since German
reunification way back in October 1990. Furthermore, it left orders down 4.1%
q-o-q in Q2, the sharpest quarterly contraction in sixteen years.
The drop in orders in June was largely thanks to weaker demand from overseas,
which dropped 5.1% on the month, with Euro-zone orders down 7.7%. Domestic
orders slipped just 0.6%. In particular, capital goods orders were down 4.4%
overall, with capital goods orders from the Euro-zone slumping 10.5%. Tomorrow's
industrial output data for June is likely to confirm a slowdown in Q2. With
indicators of domestic consumption also weakening, preliminary Q2 GDP data
- due August 14 - will show negative growth, which adds to the probability
that the ECB is done with rate hikes for this cycle.
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Victoria Marklew
The Northern Trust Company
Economic Research Department
"The economics of what is, rather than what you might like it to be."
50 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60675
The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily
represent the views of The Northern Trust Company. The Northern Trust Company
does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of information contained herein,
such information is subject to change and is not intended to influence your
investment decisions.
Copyright © 2005-2009 The Northern Trust Company
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