European manufacturing and services output dropped in May, German business confidence declined and Britain’s first-quarter contraction was deeper than previously estimated as the region’s economic slump worsened.
A composite index based on a survey of purchasing managers in the services and manufacturing industries in the 17-nation euro area fell to 45.9 from 46.7 in April, London-based Markit Economics said today. Germany’s business climate index decreased to 106.9 from 109.9 in April and U.K. gross domestic product fell 0.3 percent in the first quarter instead of 0.2 percent estimated earlier, reports showed today.
Europe’s fiscal crisis worsened over the past month as inconclusive elections in Greece fueled concerns about a euro breakup as countries from Spain to Italy struggled to narrow in budget gaps. The euro slumped to the weakest since July 2010 against the dollar and data showed economies around the globe are also faltering, with China’s manufacturing seen shrinking in May and worse-than-forecast data from Japan and Taiwan.
“The euro zone is being buffeted by major headwinds, notably increased fiscal tightening in many countries and markedly rising unemployment,” said Howard Archer, chief European economist at IHS Global Insight in London. “The heightened Greek crisis is magnifying the problems by weighing down on already weak and fragile business and consumer confidence, adding to uncertainty about the outlook.”
35 Months
The euro dropped for a third day against the dollar, trading at $1.2583 at 12:20 p.m. in Brussels. The common currency has declined 4.6 percent over the past month.
Economists had forecast the composite indicator to drop to 46.6, the median of 14 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey showed. A gauge of euro-area manufacturing decreased to 45 in May from 45.9 in April, the lowest in 35 months, Markit said. A measure of services declined to 46.5 from 46.9; that’s the weakest in seven months, according to the statement. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.
Euro-area GDP “will almost certainly show a contraction in the second quarter,” said Martin van Vliet, an economist at ING Groep NV (INGA) in Amsterdam. “Our base scenario is still for a gradual return to modestly positive growth in the second half of the year, but with the escalating debt crisis and the ongoing drag from fiscal policy, the risks are clearly skewed to a more protracted downturn.”
The U.K.’s quarterly GDP decline compared with the 0.2 percent drop that was the median forecast of 29 economists in a Bloomberg survey. From a year ago, the economy contracted 0.1 percent, the first annual drop since the fourth quarter of 2009.
Brussels Summit
European leaders meeting in Brussels yesterday clashed over joint debt sales as they called on Greece to stick with the budget cuts needed to stay in the euro area and offered no immediate relief for recession-wracked Spain. Greece is preparing for new elections on June 17 after an anti-bailout party surged to second place in balloting on May 6.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 22 cited the fiscal crisis among the risks to the global economy, when lowering its euro-zone forecasts for this year and next. The 17-nation economy will shrink 0.1 percent in 2012 before expanding 0.9 percent in 2013. The OECD had previously forecast growth of 0.2 percent and 1.4 percent, respectively.
“Such persistent weakness reflects underlying economic fiscal and financial imbalances within the euro area, which have been the root cause of this crisis and barely begun to unwind,” OECD Chief Economist Pier Carlo Padoan said in a statement. “Recovery in healthier countries, while welcome, is not strong enough to offset flat or negative growth elsewhere.”
Below-50 Readings
Economic data from China added to concerns that growth in Asia is in danger as the world grapples with the continuing debt crisis in Europe. Chinese manufacturing may shrink for a seventh month in May, a purchasing managers’ index released by HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) and Markit indicated. If confirmed on June 1, it would mark the longest run of below-50 readings since the global financial crisis.
With European households cutting spending and global economies cooling, companies may struggle to maintain their sales growth. Metro AG (MEO), Germany’s biggest retailer, said on May 23 that profit won’t rise this year, with Chief Executive Officer Olaf Koch saying while 2011 “was not an easy year,” the current year “will not be any easier.”
‘Island of Happiness’
Germany’s faltering economy means the euro-zone economy may lose a support that has helped soften the impact of recessions from Spain to Italy. German domestic demand dropped 0.3 percent in the first quarter from the previous three months, while construction slumped 1.3 percent and gross fixed capital spending decreased 1.1 percent, a report showed today.
“Until recently, it seemed as if the German economy had turned into an island of happiness,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING Group in Brussels. Today’s business confidence indicator “however, is a clear signal that even the new German magnificence could come to an end.”
The European Commission is scheduled to release an indicator of euro-area economic confidence on May 30.
European leaders tied their next steps on the financial crisis to the outcome of a bitterly contested election in Greece that may determine whether the 17- nation euro currency splinters.
A six-hour summit ended early today with an exhortation to Greek voters to elect a pro-austerity government on June 17 that makes the budget cuts needed to keep the financially ravaged country in the euro.
Euro-area finance ministers and leaders don’t meet again until after the Greek election, potentially facing a question deemed unthinkable when the euro was set up: how to broker an exit without shattering the broader European financial system.
“The summit as a whole was very troubling,” Callum Henderson, global head of currency research at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore, said on Bloomberg Television. “While they talked, they did absolutely nothing. Probably the best analogy for that informal dinner that they had is fiddling while Rome burns, or indeed Athens burns.”
Leaders made an appeal to Greek voters that echoed one issued by finance ministers last week, promising further disbursements of 240 billion euros ($302 billion) in aid to a government that stays on the budget-cutting path.
“We want Greece to remain in the euro area while respecting its commitments,” according to a statement after the summit, the 18th since Greece’s debt problems erupted. “We expect that after the elections, the new Greek government will make that choice.”
Greek Poll
European officials counted on the implied threat of an unprecedented euro-region expulsion to sap support for an anti- bailout party, called Syriza, that surged to second place in May 6 balloting. The ensuing political melee led to the new elections, with most polls pointing to Syriza as the top vote getter.
The euro fell for the 21st time in 24 days, touching a 22- month low, as the currency union’s fate got entwined with the Greek campaign. The euro bought $1.2565 at 2:30 p.m. in Brussels, down 0.1 percent from yesterday.
“If Greece elects a pro-reform government, the country could probably stay in the euro, preventing a new negative precedent in the euro area that could spark contagion to other countries such as Spain and Italy,” Christian Schulz, an economist at Berenberg Bank in London, said in an e-mailed note.
The runup to French legislative elections in June cemented the political holding pattern in Europe, with the outcome there decisive for new French President Francois Hollande’s approach to the more than two-year-old crisis.
Symbolic Break
Attending the Brussels summit on his ninth day in office, the Socialist Hollande made a symbolic break with the French- German tandem that dominated European policy making under his predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy.
Hollande called for joint bond sales by euro governments in the face of opposition from Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, a AAA country that paid 0.07 percent to borrow for two years in an auction yesterday. She reported “huge differences” with France over that proposal to reshape the way Europe operates.
“It makes no sense that everything is pasted together with euro bonds or some other kind of instrument that seems to show solidarity, only to end up with more difficult conditions in Europe than we have today,” Merkel said in Berlin today.
“Not unheated” was Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker’s description of the euro bond debate.
With the leaders unwilling to meddle in Greece and going past midnight without discussing relief for recession-wracked Spain, the summit amounted to a brainstorming session over policy options for the post-crisis economy.
‘Building Blocks’
European Union President Herman Van Rompuy took on the job of exploring “building blocks and a working method” for forging a more integrated economy, possibly with more shared borrowing and centralized banking supervision.
Creditor countries such as Finland and the Netherlands joined Germany in rejecting euro bonds, while only two leaders mentioned the possibility of a European bank deposit insurance scheme. Proposals for a centralized “bank resolution” fund have made little headway since the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. crisis of 2008, as each European country guarded its banks and refused to subsidize failing institutions elsewhere.
Van Rompuy’s assignment was similar to one he was given in October, only to be sidetracked by negotiations over a German- inspired deficit-limitation treaty now undergoing ratification. The treaty’s biggest hurdle comes on May 31 with a referendum in Ireland, a country that has twice rejected European accords.
Van Rompuy’s report on the institutional rethink is due at the next summit, on June 28-29. One potential outcome is to set up a committee to look at euro-zone governance in greater depth, much like a panel headed by then European Commission President Jacques Delors sketched out the path to the euro in 1989.