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    Eurozone factory output continues free-fall, deepening recession

    Wed, 12/12/2012 - 10:23 EDT - Financial Post
    • economy
    • EU debt crisis
    • manufacturing sector

    BRUSSELS — Eurozone factory output continued its steep fall in autumn this year, underscoring the feeble domestic demand that risks prolonging the bloc’s recession.
    Industrial production in the 17 countries sharing the euro fell 1.4% in October after falling sharply in September, the EU’s statistics office Eurostat said on Wednesday. That was much worse than the modest growth expected by economists in a Reuters poll.
    Factories had proved surprisingly resilient over the European summer, posting two months of moderate gains, but the new data supports forecasts of a third quarterly contraction in the eurozone’s economy in the October-to-December period.
    After three years of a debt crisis that has driven unemployment to a record level and pushed governments to slash spending, the economy is caught in a spiral: households are not spending and so companies are not selling, forcing them to cut staff which then further weakens consumption.
    “Domestic demand will only turn around when uncertainty among the companies about the fate of the euro has been dispelled, prompting them to increase investment again,” Ralph Solveen, an economist at Commerzbank, wrote in a research note.
    Policymakers in the eurozone, which generates a fifth of global output, are divided over the chances of an economic recovery next year but the European Central Bank has downgraded its forecasts for 2013 and expects any rebound to come in the second half of next year.
    The bloc’s 9-trillion euro economy is likely to contract at least 0.4% this year, marking its second recession since 2009 and contrasting with the United States and much of Asia and Latin America, where growth is gradually returning.
    The ECB held off from another cut in the cost of borrowing at its Governing Council meeting last week, but could take its interest rate to below the current 0.75% level in 2013, as inflation falls towards its target.
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    LOW POINT?
    Germany, France and Italy, which make up two-thirds of the euro zone’s industrial production, all saw their factory output contract for the second consecutive month in October, with Germany, the euro zone’s biggest economy, falling the most.
    At the euro zone level, only production of consumer goods such as food and cosmetics rose in October, with all other sectors falling. Output of cars, electronics and furniture fell almost 4%.
    Automakers Peugeot, Ford and General Motors have announced a total of 16,500 job cuts in Europe over the past two months, while companies ranging from Spanish airline Iberia to French telecoms equipment group Alcatel Lucent have also said they will cut staff.
    Investors and businesses are hoping the slump is reaching its lowest point. Business surveys over the past few weeks show eurozone manufacturing may be ready to rebound, with managers reassured by the ECB’s plan to buy the bonds of eurozone countries in trouble, dramatically reducing the chances of a collapse of the currency area.
    “The figures published today are very bad, but the good news is that the recession in Europe has probably hit the lowest point and a recovery might start from the second quarter of 2013 onwards,” said Peter Vanden Houte, an economist at ING.
    Much uncertainty for businesses remains. The European Union is struggling to agree on a banking union, the first step in a new phase of integration meant to underpin the euro.
    Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti’s decision to leave office early also illustrates the fragile political situation in the euro zone’s third largest economy.
    “A lot of things can still go horribly wrong,” Vanden Houte said.
    © Thomson Reuters 2012


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      A WEEK after official figures showed a steep fall in euro-zone output in late 2012 the European Commission (EC) has added to the gloom by unveiling some gloomy forecasts for 2013. Three months ago the EC envisaged a modest recovery getting under way in the first half of this year. Now that is not expected until the second half of 2013.

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