The Pak Banker

German investor confidence rebounds further in May

- FRANKFURT AM MAIN -AFP

German investor confidence kept up a sharp rebound in May after surging in April, a closelywat­ched survey showed Tuesday, reflecting "confidence in an economic turnaround" after blows from the coronaviru­s.

The ZEW institutes's monthly barometer of economic expectatio­ns for the coming months leaped 22.8 points this month for a reading of 51, continuing to shake off a steep plunge into negative territory in March. "Confidence is growing that an economic turnaround will begin in summer," ZEW chief Achim Wambach said in a statement.

"Neverthele­ss, take a long time it to will get back to where we were," Wambach added, saying the roughly 200 financial market experts surveyed see output returning to last year's levels only in 2022.

Germany is inching out of a nationwide lockdown imposed to slow the virus' spread, with shops, restaurant­s and factories gradually reopening.

Correspond­ing to the slow restart, the ZEW index measuring views of the present economic situation for Europe's top economy fell back slightly, remaining deep in negative territory at - 93.5 points.

Survey respondent­s' views of the economic situation in the 19- nation eurozone were also negative at - 95 points, but the outlook for the currency bloc also surged more than 20 points in May, landing slightly below German expectatio­ns at 46.

While Germany has been affected less than neighbours like France, Italy or Britain in numbers of deaths from the coronaviru­s, shutdowns across Europe and further abroad have hit its interconne­cted economy hard.

Hoping to kick- start an economic rebound, Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron presented plans Monday for a 500- billion- euro ($ 548 billion) European recovery fund to be backed by joint debt.

While other capitals remain to be convinced, the plan represents a retreat from German opposition to any form of shared debt between the EU's 27 member nations.

 ?? MOSCOW
-REUTERS ?? Oil prices have recovered in recent sessions but the good times won't likely last.
MOSCOW -REUTERS Oil prices have recovered in recent sessions but the good times won't likely last.

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