EMU IP Drops Month-to-Month and Year-over-Year
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Industrial output among EMU members fell by 1.8% month-to-month in March following a 0.5% increase in February and a 0.8% decline in January. The corresponding S&P Global manufacturing PMI index for these three months shows declines in March and February but an increase in January.
Looking across the countries in the table, there are 13 European Monetary Union members and three non-EMU members. We see output declines in nine countries as of March. This is a step up from 6 declines in February and it compares to 8 declines in January.
Sequential growth rates show that six of the countries in the table have decelerating output over three months, only two have decelerating output over six months and five have decelerating output over 12 months.
The consolidated figures by sector showed that overall European Monetary Union output declines by 0.9% over 12 months, increases at a 1.2% annual rate over six months but then declines sharply at an 8.1% annual rate over three months. Quarter-to-date, output is rising at a 3.7% annual rate- with today’s report the first quarter data are complete on a preliminary basis. Manufacturing output in the quarter-to-date is even stronger, rising at a 5% annual rate. Looking at sector trends, the consumer sector shows output up at a 13.3% annual rate, led by a 15.1% annual increase for consumer nondurables compared to a 4% annual rate of increase for consumer durables in the quarter-to-date. Intermediate goods output rises at a 1.4% pace while capital goods output is falling at a 0.5% pace.
The sequential growth rates for sectors show clear cut acceleration for consumer durable goods output. Consumer nondurable goods output looks healthy but fails to go over the bar to have consistent acceleration since there's a small step back over six months but the three-month growth rate at a 12.3% pace is well ahead of its 12-month growth rate of 2.8%. Intermediate goods output falls over 12 months by 0.2%, runs flat over six months, and then falls at a 5.9% annual rate over three months. Capital goods output, similarly, falls over 12 months by 2.9%, marks an increase at a 2.7% pace over six months, then falls very sharply at a 21.2% annual rate over three months. These data show relatively healthy increases in the consumer sector with uneven or weakening trends for intermediate goods and capital goods with some severe encroaching weakness for capital goods.
Capital goods not only show that output is lower in the quarter, when compared to the pre-COVID level, output is also lower- that is over two years ago. Capital goods output is down 5.7% from its level in January 2020. All the other industrial sectors show increases. This decline in capital goods is enough to knock manufacturing output down by 0.4% on the same timeline well overall industrial output falls by zero point 7% on the same timeline.
Going back to country details of the 13 reporting European Monetary Union countries, six of them have declining output in the quarter-to-date; however, none of the declines are among the four largest EMU economies Germany, France, Italy, or Spain.
Five EMU countries still have levels of output that are below their levels of January 2020 before the virus struck. These include Germany, France, Malta, Luxembourg, and Portugal. In addition, non-EMU member, the U.K., has output lower by 0.5% on this timeline and Norway has output lower by 0.8% on this timeline.
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Industrial output among EMU members fell by 1.8% month-to-month in March following a 0.5% increase in February and a 0.8% decline in January. The corresponding S&P Global manufacturing PMI index for these three months shows declines in March and February but an increase in January.
Looking across the countries in the table, there are 13 European Monetary Union members and three non-EMU members. We see output declines in nine countries as of March. This is a step up from 6 declines in February and it compares to 8 declines in January.
Sequential growth rates show that six of the countries in the table have decelerating output over three months, only two have decelerating output over six months and five have decelerating output over 12 months.
The consolidated figures by sector showed that overall European Monetary Union output declines by 0.9% over 12 months, increases at a 1.2% annual rate over six months but then declines sharply at an 8.1% annual rate over three months. Quarter-to-date, output is rising at a 3.7% annual rate- with today’s report the first quarter data are complete on a preliminary basis. Manufacturing output in the quarter-to-date is even stronger, rising at a 5% annual rate. Looking at sector trends, the consumer sector shows output up at a 13.3% annual rate, led by a 15.1% annual increase for consumer nondurables compared to a 4% annual rate of increase for consumer durables in the quarter-to-date. Intermediate goods output rises at a 1.4% pace while capital goods output is falling at a 0.5% pace.
The sequential growth rates for sectors show clear cut acceleration for consumer durable goods output. Consumer nondurable goods output looks healthy but fails to go over the bar to have consistent acceleration since there's a small step back over six months but the three-month growth rate at a 12.3% pace is well ahead of its 12-month growth rate of 2.8%. Intermediate goods output falls over 12 months by 0.2%, runs flat over six months, and then falls at a 5.9% annual rate over three months. Capital goods output, similarly, falls over 12 months by 2.9%, marks an increase at a 2.7% pace over six months, then falls very sharply at a 21.2% annual rate over three months. These data show relatively healthy increases in the consumer sector with uneven or weakening trends for intermediate goods and capital goods with some severe encroaching weakness for capital goods.
Capital goods not only show that output is lower in the quarter, when compared to the pre-COVID level, output is also lower- that is over two years ago. Capital goods output is down 5.7% from its level in January 2020. All the other industrial sectors show increases. This decline in capital goods is enough to knock manufacturing output down by 0.4% on the same timeline well overall industrial output falls by zero point 7% on the same timeline.
Going back to country details of the 13 reporting European Monetary Union countries, six of them have declining output in the quarter-to-date; however, none of the declines are among the four largest EMU economies Germany, France, Italy, or Spain.
Five EMU countries still have levels of output that are below their levels of January 2020 before the virus struck. These include Germany, France, Malta, Luxembourg, and Portugal. In addition, non-EMU member, the U.K., has output lower by 0.5% on this timeline and Norway has output lower by 0.8% on this timeline.
Robert Brusca
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Robert A. Brusca is Chief Economist of Fact and Opinion Economics, a consulting firm he founded in Manhattan. He has been an economist on Wall Street for over 25 years. He has visited central banking and large institutional clients in over 30 countries in his career as an economist. Mr. Brusca was a Divisional Research Chief at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY (Chief of the International Financial markets Division), a Fed Watcher at Irving Trust and Chief Economist at Nikko Securities International. He is widely quoted and appears in various media. Mr. Brusca holds an MA and Ph.D. in economics from Michigan State University and a BA in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research pursues his strong interests in non aligned policy economics as well as international economics. FAO Economics’ research targets investors to assist them in making better investment decisions in stocks, bonds and in a variety of international assets. The company does not manage money and has no conflicts in giving economic advice.