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As generally expected, German business sentiment slipped a little further
in February, with the Ifo research institute's business climate index dipping
to 107.0 from 107.9 in January. As Ifo's economists pointed out, some fall
was expected after the three percentage point hike in the VAT rate that took
effect in January (taking it to 19%), and a slide of less than a point is hardly
dramatic. Overall, the level remains well above the long-term average.

In fact, almost all of the decline in the headline index came as a result
of drops in the assessment of current conditions in the retailing and construction
components (down by 4.3 and 4.7 points, respectively). Sentiment in both sectors
had been biased upward in recent months in anticipation of that rate hike,
and mild winter weather earlier in the season also played a role. Sentiment
in the manufacturing and wholesaling components barely shifted (down 0.8 and
0.9 of a point, respectively). And while the business expectations index also
declined from 103.2 in January, this month's reading of 102.6 remained well
into positive territory.
Yesterday came confirmation that real GDP growth in Germany accelerated a
seasonally-adjusted 0.9% on the quarter and 3.7% (working day adjusted) on
the year, as surging exports offset a drop in domestic demand triggered by
a massive liquidation of inventories. All told, the German economy still looks
set to weather the VAT hike rather well. That bodes well for the wider Euro-zone,
as does the news yesterday from 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.

After slipping a little over the previous four months, the overall index rose
to 3.5 in February, thanks to a recovery in each of the three sub-components
- manufacturing, trade, and construction. In manufacturing, both domestic and
export orders picked up smartly in February.
One month does not a recovery trend make, but it does appear that Euro-zone
GDP growth will hold up quite nicely this year. Euro-zone data to watch over
the coming week include January money supply (Feb. 27), various sentiment surveys
for February (Feb. 28), and flash February CPI (March 1), while the major German
release next week will be February's unemployment data (Feb. 28).
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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 © 2005-2008 The Northern Trust Company
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