In the wake of a mixed in somewhat complex orders report from Germany yesterday, today Germany released its industrial production report. It shows output up by 0.4% in April after several months of declines. There was a strong gain of 1.9% month-to-month in consumer goods output and another strong gain of 1.4% in intermediate goods output. However, capital goods output continues to be weak, falling 1.5% month-to-month and continuing a string of five months in a row when manufacturing output for capital goods has declined.
Sequentially, overall output is showing strengthening growth rates from 12 months to six months to three months. The tendency to strengthen is driven by intermediate goods that have the exact same pattern in play. However, capital goods are showing increasing weakness from 12 months to six months to three months, culminating in a three-month annualized growth rate of -10.5%. The growth rate in consumer goods is weaker over three months and over 12 months but isn't intact progressively over all three periods. The chart is helpful here as it shows recent weakness and a more recent rebound that still leaves year-over-year growth rates declining.
Manufacturing output shows declines over each of these three periods without a clear trend tendency for speeding up or cooling down. Real manufacturing orders are close to accelerating over this same sequence of dates, while retail sector sales in manufacturing show increases in two of the periods, with a decline over three months at the end of the sequence and without a clear trend in place.
Other German industrial indicators are showing consistent weakness and deterioration from 12 months to six months to three months. That holds for the ZEW current index, the IFO manufacturing index, the IFO expectations index for manufacturing, and the European Commission’s index of industrial activity.
As for other early-reporting European economies, we have France, Spain, Portugal, and Norway to compare. France is showing acceleration from 12 months to three months. Spain comes close to showing consistent acceleration and finishes with a massive 60% annual rate of increase over three months. Portugal fails to show consistent signs but ends with strong output growth over three months as well. Norway also fails to show a consistent pattern and has a solid 2.3% growth rate over three months. The results from France and Spain are the most impressive among these—France because it shows consistent acceleration, and Spain because it is so very strong over the last three months.
In the quarter to date (QTD)—with one month of data in hand for the second quarter—all German sectors are showing expansion except for capital goods and manufacturing overall. The indicators for Germany show weakened conditions as we step into the new quarter, except for the EU Commission index. The four European countries we chronicled earlier, all show gains in the quarter to date, with France and Spain showing the most pickup.
The final column of the table ranks year-over-year growth rates on data back to 2006. On this basis, only the German intermediate goods sector has a year-over-year growth rate that ranks above its median for the period. Real manufacturing orders are close to their median with a 49.2 percentile standing, whereas the median occurs at a ranking of 50%. For the other industrial indicators, we compare them to historic index levels, and all four of the indicators are substantially below their historic marks since 2006. Meanwhile, for the four countries in Europe, three of the four are showing industrial output results that rank above their historic medians: Spain shows a 79th percentile ranking, France has a 77th percentile ranking, and Portugal has a 53rd percentile ranking. Only Norway has a subpar (below-median) 25th percentile ranking.








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