Graeme Wearden 

Germany narrowly avoids recession; US retail sales slide – as it happened

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, including the latest German GDP report and a speech by Bank of England policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe
  
  

German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Chancellor Angela Merkel. Germany has failed to post any growth since June. Photograph: Markus Schreiber/AP

Like a bad Valentine’s Day date, today’s stock market rally has fizzled out after a perky start.

The FTSE 100 index has closed just 6 points higher at 7,197, having earlier hit a four-month high around 7,230 points.

While Brexit worries are sweeping the City again, the weak US retail sales also knocked confidence.

Fiona Cincotta of City Index explains:

US retail sales unexpectedly fell in December -1.2%, the largest decline in 9 years. Analysts had expected retail sales to have increased 0.1%. Retail sales are renowned for their volatility. Under normal circumstances one weak reading by no means constitutes a new trend. However, these dire figures feed directly into the market fear over slowing economic growth. This explains why we havre seem such a dramatic market reaction.

The figures showed a broad weakness across most sectors, fuelling concerns that the cooling of the US economy from prior quarters, could be greater than initially projected. Although interestingly this goes against the impressively strong labour market data which we saw in December and January. US futures quickly erased gains resulting in a weaker start for Wall Street.

Brexit worries push pound to one-month low

Back in the markets, the pound is under pressure as the UK government faces fresh defeats over Brexit tonight.

Sterling has shed more than half a cent against the US dollar to $1.278, a one-month low.

Remain-supporting MPs are likely to rebel against Theresa May over a string of amendments, including one insisting that she publishes the government’s no-deal economic impact assessment.

Leave supporters are also up in arms, unhappy that the government isn’t giving strong enough assurances that Brexit will definitely happen on 29 March.

Andy Sparrow’s Politics Liveblog has all the details:

Capital Economics are also concerned by the (apparent) slump in US retail spending; suggesting it will force the Federal Reserve to leave interest rates on hold for longer for some time:

The unexpected plunge in control group retail sales in December means that fourth-quarter GDP growth was probably nearer 2.5% annualised than the 3.1% we had pencilled in and, more worryingly, it also suggests the economy entered 2019 with less momentum than anticipated.

That doesn’t mean the economy is falling into recession; after all, that decline is hard to square with the recent strength of payroll gains and the boost to households’ purchasing power from lower energy prices. But with the producer price data suggesting inflationary pressures remain contained, it strengthens the case for the Fed to remain “patient” in the months ahead.

The retail sales plunge has prompted Morgan Stanley to slash their forecast for annualised US growth in the last quarter (the official estimate has been delayed until the end of December).

They’re also gloomy about the current quarter:

Wall Street hit by retail worries

The US stock market has opened in the red, as the weak retail sales figures worry traders.

The Dow Jones industrial average has shed 175 points, or 0.7%, to around 25,368.

Consumer goods group Nike is the biggest faller, down 1.4%, reflecting concerns that the US shopper may be cutting back.

Construction machinery giant Caterpillar, a good bellwether of the global economy, is down -1.25%. It’s followed by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan (both down 1%), who would suffer if the US economy stumbled.

The broader S&P 500 and the tech-focused Nasdaq are also in the red.

However, Wall Street is still up 10% so far this year, so some retracement wouldn’t be a shock.

The latest US jobs figures aren’t too hot either.

The number of Americans filing new unemployment claims jumped last week, to 239,000, a 4,000 increase.

This pushed the four-week moving average of initial jobless claims, a less volatile measure, hit a one-year high.

Worryingly, the US retail sales report shows that 11 of 13 major retail categories showed a decline in sales last month. That includes non-store retailers (down 3.9%!), clothing stores and gas stations.

Bloomberg has more details:

Receipts at health and personal care stores fell 2%, the most since October 2016. Sales at sporting goods, hobby, musical instrument and book stores tumbled 4.9%, the biggest drop since September 2008.

December’s US retail sales figures are so bad that some economists are questioning whether they really show what’s happening in the American economy.

Perhaps the shock 1.2% decline is all down to bad weather, or the US shutdown? Maybe it’s a knock-on effect from Black Wednesday in November?

Or could the US-China trade wars be to blame - hurting confidence and driving up the cost of Chinese-made imports?

Updated

The surprise plunge in US retail sales has knocked the dollar down a little:

The news has sent traders piling into US government bonds -- suggesting they expect weaker growth in 2019. That’s pushed down the interest rate (or yield) on the debt.

US retail sales take surprise tumble

Newsflash: US retail sales have fallen at the sharpest rate since the financial crisis.

Retail sales fell by 1.2% in December, figures just released show. That’s the biggest drop since September 2009 - the end of the last US recession.

Core retail sales (stripping out volatile items like food and gasoline) fell by 1.7% - following a 1% surge in November.

Now it might just be a blip, as the US government shutdown may have deterred Americans from spending heavily. But it may also show that the economy is slowing.

Here’s our news story on the impact of the Brexit vote on UK growth:

Back in the UK, cake chain Patisserie Valerie has been saved from closure.

Irish private equity firm Causeway Capital is financing a management buyout for company, which was dragged into administration by a £40m black hole in its accounts.

This must be a relief for employees, as my colleague Sarah Butler explains:

Almost 100 cafes will be rescued in the Causeway Capital deal, while another 21 sites under the Philpotts brand have been bought by AF Blakemore & Son, the family owned company which is the largest operator of Spar franchise outlets in the UK.

The two deals will save about 2,000 jobs.

Eurozone growth: What the experts say

Pablo Shah, senior economist at the CEBR, isn’t impressed by today’s eurozone growth figures - showing the region only expanded by 0.2% last quarter.

He sees trouble ahead:

“Today’s data confirm that the Eurozone economy is now in the midst of a protracted slowdown, with risks stacked towards the downside going into 2019.

Political unrest is simmering across the euro area, while the risks of a disorderly Brexit and an escalation of trade tensions with the US remain live.”

Barret Kupelian, senior economist at PwC, says there are bright spots among the gloom:

“Germany, the largest economy in the Eurozone, narrowly avoided a recession in the fourth quarter as its output remained at the same levels as the previous quarter. Italy however had no such luck as its output contracted by 0.2% for a second consecutive quarter, entering its fifth recession in the 21st century. This is likely to increase its budget deficit as a proportion of GDP in the future, which could cause friction with European authorities.

“However, most of the slack from Germany’s and Italy’s poor performance was offset by strong output growth in Spain, the Netherlands and France which grew at a respectable 0.3% quarter-on-quarter despite the gilets jaunes protests. Spain continues to be the poster-child of the peripheral economies, with its economy growing by an average of 0.7% quarter-on-quarter.

Stephen Hubble, chief analyst at City firm Centtrip, thinks the European Central Bank may have to step in again:

“Meanwhile, Italy has fallen into recession for the third time in a decade, Spain has failed to agree a budget for 2019, the Brexit deadline is looming and uncertainty over global slowdown and trade tensions is rising. The question is how long will the recovery take and what action can the ECB take to try and boost European growth, having stopped its QE programme at the end of December.

You can read Jan Vleighe’s speech here:

Q: What has the Bank of England learned about the impact of political uncertainty on the economy?

Gertjan Vlieghe replies that the Bank has learned that not all political uncertainty is the same.

There are some where people scratch their head, and don’t feel happy, but they keeps spending. And others where people do cut back on their spending, hurting the economy.

Sometimes increased political uncertainty goes hand in hand with increased financial turmoil - credit spreads widening, risk premia increasing. When the two go together you see an economic effect. However, if the markets don’t respond to political uncertainty, it doesn’t seem to affect the economy, he says.

So the Bank has to decide what kind of uncertainty the UK is facing now, Vlieghe concludes.

He doesn’t specifically mention Brexit. But in broad terms, this argument explains why some economists (wrongly) predicted a recession if Britain voted to leave the EU - only to find that consumers weren’t panicking (not too surprising, given half of them should have been happy with the referendum result).

Gertjan Vlieghe is taking questions, and is asked how soon the Bank of England might raise interest rates.

He warns that the UK economic data “is still deteriorating”, so that’s not a good time to raise borrowing costs. The Bank of England would need to see economic data stabilising, and then improving, first.

But really, it all depends on Brexit.

If a withdrawal agreement is reached, confidence shoots up and business investment rallies, then it might not take long before interest rates move higher, Vlieghe says.

But if it takes longer to get clarity on Brexit, and firms take longer to respond, then borrowing costs (currently 0.75%) could stay low for longer.

BoE policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe has also warned that business confidence has suffered from Brexit uncertainty, while households have barely changed their behaviour:

You can see Gertjan Vlieghe’s comments on the economic costs of Brexit here:

Video: Resolution Foundation speech by BoE’s Gertjan Vlieghe

Bank of England policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe has taken a pop at the Vote Leave bus, in his speech on the impact of Brexit:

We now have a decent picture of how Europe’s economy fared in the last three months of 2018, and over the whole year. And it’s not encouraging.

Both the European Union and the eurozone only grew by 0.2% in the last quarter, with Germany stagnant, Italy in recession, and France and the UK both posting modest growth.

In terms of quarterly growth, the UK was the third-best performer out of the EU’s Big Five.

Taking a longer-term view, Eurozone GDP was only 1.2% higher than in Q4 2017, rising to 1.4% in the wider EU.

  • Spain: 2.4% growth in Q4 2018 vs Q4 2017
  • UK: 1.3% growth in Q4 2018 vs Q4 2017
  • France: 0.9% growth in Q4 2018 vs Q4 2017
  • Germany: 0.6% growth in Q4 2018 vs Q4 2017
  • Italy: 0.1% growth in Q4 2018 vs Q4 2017

Updated

Newsflash: Eurostat has confirmed that the eurozone economy grew by 0.2% in the last quarter, in line with its first estimate two weeks ago.

More to follow....

Bank of England policymaker: Brexit is costing £800m per week

NEWSFLASH: Brexit is costing the economy £800m per week in lost growth, two-and-a-half years after the EU referendum, according to a Bank of England rate-setter.

Speaking in London, Gertjan Vlieghe, an external member of the Bank’s monetary policy committee, also predicted that a damaging no-deal scenario could force an emergency cut in interest rates.

Vlieghe is explaining that that, since the EU referendum in June 2016, the British economy had lost about 2% of GDP relative to a scenario where that had been no significant domestic economic events.

The vote has cost the economy about £40bn per year, or about £800m per week of lost income, he said. That is more than double the £350m per week the Leave campaign printed on the side of its battle bus as the amount Britain sent to Brussels to pay for its EU membership.

Vlieghe says:

“UK growth in the past two years has been weaker than we would have expected based on the performance of the global economy alone. Based on what happened in the rest of the world we would have expected UK growth to accelerate, but actually it slowed.

Vlieghe, a former hedge fund manager, added that a no-deal Brexit could warrant an emergency cut in interest rates, should there be a further negative impact for the economy

“In the case of a no-deal scenario I judge that an easing or an extended pause in monetary policy is more likely to be the appropriate policy than a tightening.”

Updated

German economy ministry blames Brexit and trade disputes

Germany’s economy ministry has weighed in, citing Brexit uncertainty and trade wars as key factors behind the country’s slowdown.

Reuters has the details:

Britain’s forthcoming departure from the European Union and trade disputes are still causing uncertainty for the German economy but the car industry is making progress in adapting to new WLTP pollution standards, the Economy Ministry said.

It added that production sites dependent on inland shipping are no longer being hampered by low water levels.

While the construction boom is likely to continue in the coming months, given an increase in orders, and private consumption will remain strong, indicators overall suggest that exports from Europe’s largest economy will be subdued in the coming months, the ministry said.

Germany’s stock market has risen this morning, amid relief that its economy has avoided falling into recession.

The DAX index has gained 0.25%, helping push the Europe-wide Stoxx 600 to its highest level since November.

Here’s Associated Press’s take on the German growth report:

Germany narrowly avoided a recession in the fourth quarter, reporting only zero growth as foreign trade made little contribution to Europe’s largest economy.

The lackluster figure released Thursday by the state statistics agency followed a 0.2% fall in output during the preceding third quarter. Business spending on machinery and equipment as well as construction supported the economy in the fourth quarter and kept Germany from suffering two straight quarters of negative growth, one definition of a recession.

Slowing global trade amid U.S.-China trade tensions has been holding back Germany’s export-focused economy. Growth last year was also hit by troubles in the auto industry when automakers had difficulty getting new cars certified under new emissions tests, and by low water on the Rhine River that interrupted commerce. The slowdown led the European Commission last week to cut its growth forecast for Germany for this year to 1.3% from 1.9%.

The weak second half followed stronger performance in the first six months, leaving growth for the full year at 1.5%.

Andrew Kenningham, chief Europe economist at Capital Economics, said the fourth-quarter weakness “bodes ill for economic growth this year too.” He said the fourth-quarter weakness could no longer be attributed to the auto sector problems since vehicle production edged up in the last three months of the year. He forecast 1.0% growth this year but added “there are significant downside risks to this forecast.”

Economist Carsten Brzeski at ING Germany said that “the German economy escaped a technical recession with the smallest margin possible. The black eye just got blacker.” He said, however, that many economic fundamentals remain strong. A low unemployment rate of 3.3 percent is helping support domestic demand.

“The upside from today’s data is that it can hardly get worse,” Brzeski said. “Economic fundamentals remain solid and from here on, chances of a gradual rebound are still much higher than chances of yet another disappointment.”

Claus Vistesen, economist at Pantheon, says Germany’s economy was held back by weak net trade and sluggish consumers’ spending.

He fears that the eurozone growth figures, which will be updated at 10am, will be lowered from 0.2% to just 0.1% for the last quarter.

Just as bad as we feared, adding to our conviction that today’s second estimate quarter-on-quarter for the eurozone as a whole will be revised down, by 0.1pp, to 0.1%.

We don’t see numerical details in this report, but the statistical office provide hints, indicating that domestic demand, mainly investment in construction and machinery and equipment, and government spending supported the economy. By contrast, growth in consumers’ spending remained subdued, and net exports remained a severe drag on headline GDP growth.

We don’t yet have a breakdown of German GDP for the last quarter. But this chart shows how net trade had a negative impact in the third quarter of 2018 (when the economy shrank by 0.2%).

It’s from Florien Hense of Berenberg Bank, who says external shocks, political risks and temporary domestic problem all hurt growth.

He adds:

2019 looks set to have started as 2018 ended – not well. While the risks loom large, chances are that a brighter spring could still follow the grey winter if trade tensions do not escalate badly, China escapes a hard landing and the UK avoids a hard Brexit.

Ana Andrade, Germany analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, predicts that Germany’s government may be forced to stimulate its economy this year (through higher spending):

“German weakness is attributed in part to the production disruption in the auto sector that resulted from the introduction of the EU’s new emissions standards, to rising geopolitical uncertainty and the softer growth in the Chinese economy.

The economy will enter a slowdown in 2109 but this will be manageable. Still, risks to the economy in 2019 are on the downsize and are mainly external and geopolitical. It if turns out to be worst than expected, we believe the government would be willing to provide some fiscal stimulus. It is very well-placed to do so.”

ING: German black eye worsens

Carsten Brzeski of ING says Germany’s economic “black eye” has taken a blow, after its economy failed to grow in the last quarter.

The German economy escaped a technical recession with the smallest margin possible. The black eye just got blacker. Still, the upside from today’s data is that it can hardly get worse.

Brzeski also reels off a list of reasons for Germany’s poor performance of late:

The weak performance of the German economy in the second half of the year is the result of (too many) one-offs, surfacing structural weaknesses and external uncertainties. Just think of cars, low water levels in main rivers, the trade conflict between the US and China, Brexit or the lack of investment in digital and traditional infrastructure, delays of railways and airlines as well as hardly any significant new structural reforms in the last ten years.

What a list! However, it is still not necessarily the end of a long positive cycle.

Why has Germany's economy slowed?

Germany used to be the powerhouse of the eurozone economy, but a cocktail of blows from home and abroad have left it nursing a bad hangover.

1) The global slowdown. The world economy has come off the boil in recent months, partly due to Donald Trump’s trade war. That means less investment, so lower demand for machinery produced by Germany’s industrial heartland. China, in particular, has been cutting back on imports as its economy slows.

2) Brexit. The UK isn’t the only country where Brexit uncertainty is causing anxiety. German bosses also fear a no-deal crisis, and will be making investment decisions accordingly.

3) Car woes. The Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal is still reverberating around Germany’s auto sector. Carmakers now have to meet tougher pollution tests, creating a backlog of models waiting to be tested and approved, and a backlog at the factories.

4) The weather. Germany suffered some pretty devastating flooding in 2018, causing several fatalities and forcing thousands to leave their homes. That disruption hasn’t helped the economy.

Some economists are predicting that Germany’s economy will pick up in 2019.

Here’s analysts at Danske Bank:

And here’s Azad Zangana of Schroders:

Destatis says that domestic demand made a positive contribution to German growth in the last quarter -- that’ll be household consumption and government spending.

However, trade (so often the backbone of German growth) “did not make a positive contribution”.

That suggests that US-China trade war, and its knock-on effect on the world economy, is hurting Germany.

Updated

This chart shows how German’s growth rate has slowed:

Germany avoids recession, just!

Good morning.

Germany is teetering on the brink of recession, after the eurozone’s largest economy failed to grow in the last quarter.

New GDP figures just released show that German GDP was flat in the October-December quarter, following a 0.2% contraction in July-September.

That means Germany has JUST avoided a technical recession, but has also failed to post any growth since June (when its footballers were crashing out of the World Cup).

Destatis, the Germany statistics body says:

After a dynamic start into the first half of the year (+0.4% in the first quarter, +0.5% in the second quarter), a small dip (-0.2% in the third quarter, 0.0% in the fourth quarter) was recorded in the second half of the year.

For the whole year of 2018, this was an increase of 1.4% (calendar adjusted: 1.5%). Hence growth was slightly smaller than reported in January.

Interestingly, that 1.4% matches the UK’s own performance in 2018.

Reaction to follow....

Also coming up today

It’s a big day in the US-China trade war. Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin and Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer will hold talks with Vice Premier Liu He, the top economic adviser to Chinese President Xi Jinping, later today.

If the tête-à-tête goes well, Donald Trump could extend the deadline for reaching an agreement that addresses US concerns over intellectual property protections.

We also get more eurozone GDP figures today, giving a broader picture of Europe’s economy (which is increasingly looking rather weak).

The agenda

  • 10am GMT: Eurozone GDP (second estimate) for Q4 2018
  • 10am GMT: Eurozone unemployment statistics for Q4 2018
  • 1.30pm GMT: US retail sales for January
 

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