Khaleej Times

Eurozone businesses in best shape, expects surge in orders

- Jonathan Cable

london — Eurozone businesses began 2018 by increasing activity faster than at any time in well over a decade as new orders surged despite firms raising prices at the steepest rate in almost seven years, a survey showed.

The eurozone emerged as one of the best-performing major economies last year. Forward-looking indicators in the survey suggest that momentum will continue for at least another few months — welcome news for the European Central Bank as it moves to unwind policy.

IHS Markit’s Final Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index, seen as a good overall growth indicator for the eurozone, rose to 58.8 in January from December’s 58.1 and up from the flash estimate of 58.6.

It is now at its highest since June 2006 and well above the 50 mark that separates growth from contractio­n.

“The optimism reflects the strong economic upturn that the euro zone is experienci­ng, which continues to be broad-based and is set to continue in the months ahead,” said Bert Colijn at ING.

“Backlogs of work are increasing, job creation is historical­ly very strong and new orders continue to pour in. This makes for a rosy growth outlook.”

Earlier figures from Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, showed private sector growth was at a near seven-year high while in France the business boom showed no sign of abating in January.

However, investor morale in the bloc deteriorat­ed this month over discontent with coalition negotiatio­ns between German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD).

Still, Italian business growth was at a 10-1/2 year high while in Spain the service industry, worth around half of total economic output, expanded at its fastest pace in six months. Those upbeat surveys stand in stark contrast to a British PMI, which was at the bottom end of

The optimism reflects the strong economic upturn that the eurozone is experienci­ng, which continues to be broad-based and is set to continue in the months ahead Bert Colijn, ING

a range of forecasts in a Reuters poll and showed the UK economy slowed sharply in January.

“Following falls in the manufactur­ing and constructi­on PMI surveys released last week, the weak January services sector survey will do little to assuage fears that the economy lost the momentum it gained in Q4 at the start of 2018,” said Paul Hollingswo­rth at Capital Economics.

Although inflation is still nowhere near their target ceiling of 2 per cent, ECB policymake­rs halved their monthly asset purchases from January and are expected to end the quantitati­ve easing programme completely by the end of the year. So they will be heartened to see an index measuring prices charged leapt to 54.8 from December’s 53.2, its highest since April 2011. Higher energy prices proved a drag on retail sales across the bloc in December, which slipped 1.1 per cent monthon-month.

IHS Markit said the PMI data, if maintained, pointed to first quarter GDP growth of 1.0 per cent, which would be the best since the second quarter of 2010 and much faster than the 0.6 per cent predicted by a Reuters poll last month.

Britain’s PMI points to an economic expansion of just 0.3 per cent, IHS Markit said.

Growth in the bloc is being supported by a booming service industry. Its PMI bounced to 58.0 from 56.6, surpassing the flash estimate of 57.6 and chalking up its highest reading since August 2007.

That growth was boosted by new business flooding in at the fastest rate in over a decade. The sub-index was 57.3, up from 56.7 the month before to a level also not seen since August 2007.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, showed private sector growth was at a near 7-year high while in France the business boom showed no sign of abating in January. —
Bloomberg Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, showed private sector growth was at a near 7-year high while in France the business boom showed no sign of abating in January. —

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