Montreal Gazette

Eurozone crisis dampens investor confidence in Germany

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FRANKFURT – A key measure of German investor confidence fell unexpected­ly in July in another sign that the eurozone financial crisis is weighing on Europe’s largest economy.

The ZEW institute said Tuesday its index fell for the third month in a row to minus 19.6 points from minus 16.9 in June. Market analysts foresaw a small increase to minus 15.0.

Germany is the largest economy in the 17-country eurozone and has an outsized effect on the currency union and its efforts to dig out of a crisis over too much government debt.

It has enjoyed economic growth and low unemployme­nt even as financiall­y troubled countries such as Spain and Italy were sinking into recession. German growth of 0.5 per cent in the first quarter kept the eurozone as a whole from sliding into recession, and the German economy is still ex- pected to post modest growth this year.

Yet economic indicators have worsened recently as the financial turmoil heightened economic uncertaint­y among other eurozone members – who are also Germany’s main trade partners. The European Central Bank cut its key interest rate July 5 to a record low 0.75 per cent to stimulate the eurozone economy.

The ZEW remains well below its long-term average of plus 24.0.

Carsten Brzeski, an ana- lyst with ING bank, said Germany should still escape a sharp downturn, noting the ZEW index has in the past been a better indicator for investor perception­s of the eurozone crisis than of German economic growth.

Data on German industrial production and private consumptio­n remained stable, he noted. “The economy has not yet escaped the risk of a contractio­n in the second quarter but a severe deteriorat­ion, as in most other eurozone countries, should be avoided,” he wrote in a note to investors.

Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London, took a more bearish view and predicted Germany would suffer a recession with GDP falling by 1.0 per cent next year. “Germany’s earlier economic resilience is at an end,” she said.

The Mannheim-based ZEW, or Centre for European Economic Research, surveyed 273 investment analysts July 2-16 about their about their expectatio­ns for the next six months.

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