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Today's Ifo and last week's Belgian leading indicator offer the tantalizing
hope that the economic downturn across the Euro-zone is starting to bottom
out - but one month is not enough to call a trend, and the ‘zone in general,
and Germany in particular, are still likely in for a rough first quarter of
2009.
First, the Ifo index in Germany. The headline business climate index edged
upward from 82.7 in December to 83.0 in January, the first improvement in eight
months. While the current conditions sub-index continued to deteriorate, slipping
from 88.8 in December to 86.8 in January, the expectations sub-index rose from
76.9 to 79.4. The assumption is that monetary easing from the European Central
Bank (ECB), combined with the government's recent fiscal stimulus package,
have restored some stability to the economy, allowing businesses to see some
light at the end of the tunnel. Nevertheless, the difference between the current
conditions and expectations indices remains wide, suggesting that the economy
will contract again in Q1 2009 and that the government's latest forecast of
-2.25% real GDP growth this year is about right.
Chart 1

Which takes us to our favorite Euro-zone leading indicator, the Belgian National
Bank's (BNB) business confidence indicator. As we've noted before, thanks to
Belgium's strong trade ties with its neighbors (about 80% of Belgium's manufacturing
output is sold abroad, mostly to fellow EU members), the BNB's business confidence
index is a reliable leading indicator - about six months out - for GDP growth
in the Euro-zone as a whole.
Chart 2

Having crashed to a record-low -31.3 in December, the overall confidence index
managed to nudge up to -27.7 in January, as confidence improved somewhat in
the manufacturing sector (from -36.5 in December, to -30.3 in January). The
data hint that the worst of the deterioration is over, but this is not the
same as recovery. It is most likely that what we are seeing is some stabilization
at low levels with a clear improving trend in the indicator unlikely until
sometime in Q2.
The Belgian and German data imply that the Euro-zone as a whole will see a
marked contraction in Q4 2008 and Q1 2009, flat-to-negative growth in the middle
of the year, and a sustained improvement finally underway by Q4. But given
the speed with which demand collapsed across the region in recent weeks, the
risk for this outlook remains to the downside.
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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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