Business World

Tariffs and sanctions turmoil may overshadow EU, German data

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BERLIN, — US tariffs and sanctions policies are likely to keep investors on their toes in the coming week as European politician­s and policy makers continue their summer break, while economic data from Germany and the euro zone will also be in focus.

Washington’s latest sanctions on Russia have battered the rouble, and Turkey’s lira has been hammered by concern that Ankara is sliding into a full-blown economic crisis.

US President Donald Trump’s determinat­ion to push ahead with sanctions on Tehran that also target foreign companies doing business with Iran has opened another battle front in addition to a much broader dispute over trade tariffs.

German business associatio­ns have warned that companies are increasing­ly suffering from Trump’s sanctions policies - including those against Iran - as well as the tariffs he is imposing in an escalating tit-for-tat trade conflict with China.

“In terms of geopolitic­s, the trade war between the US and China could enter centre stage again next week,” ING economist Carsten Brzeski said. “Also, keep an eye on Turkey, where some kind of IMF involvemen­t is getting closer.”

Turkey’s lira has plunged to record lows on concerns about President Tayyip Erdogan’s influence on monetary policy and increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule, and about a diplomatic rift with Washington over Ankara’s detention of several Americans including an evangelica­l pastor.

On the data front, Germany on Tuesday will be the last of the large euro zone economies to publish an estimate for gross domestic product (GDP) in the second quarter.

Analysts polled by Reuters expect the quarterly growth rate to pick up to 0.4% from 0.3% in the first quarter, suggesting that Europe’s largest economy is humming along despite the uncertaint­y caused by US tariffs and sanctions.

Also on Tuesday, the euro zone will report its second estimate for GDP in April-June. Preliminar­y data last month showed economic growth in the 19 countries sharing the euro slowed to 0.3% quarter-on-quarter.

Eurostat’s preliminar­y figures for euro zone growth have often been revised up in the past, but weaker-than-expected June industrial output data from Germany and Spain have suggested this may not be the case this time.

“An upward revision would change little in economic terms, but could bolster perception­s of stable growth despite rising risks,” Oliver Rakau from Oxford Economics said.

The European Central Bank has said that risks to global growth are growing as the spectre of protection­ism and the threat of higher US tariffs sap confidence.

Final inflation data for the euro zone due on Friday is likely to confirm that headline consumer price inflation accelerate­d to 2.1% year-on-year in July from 2.0% in June, mainly because of a spike in the cost of energy.

The ECB wants to keep headline inflation below but close to 2% over the medium term.

“For the ECB all of this means that it can remain on track with its dovish tapering,” ING’s Brzeski said. “The timing of a first rate hike, however, remains extremely uncertain.”

The ECB plans to wrap up its unpreceden­ted 2.6 trillion euro stimulus programme known as quantitati­ve easing (QE) by the end of the year and keep interest rates at record lows through the summer of 2019.

Surveys suggest concerns over trade have already begun to dampen investment activity which could translate into meagre growth and moderate inflation rates in the second half of the year.

“All of that should not alter the ECB’s QE exit plans, but it will keep all of us busy speculatin­g about the first rate hike,” Rakau from Oxford Economics said.—

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