Eurozone
Retail Sales Plunge at Strongest Pace Since Late-2008
German
Retail Sales Plunge Into Contraction; French Retail Sales Plunge at
Record Pace; Record Job Losses, Record Retail Plunge in Italy
27
April, 2012
The
word of the day is plunge. Retail sales fell like a rock in Germany
and fell at a record pace in France. Jobs and retail sales plunged at
a record pace in Italy, and in general, did a nose-dive across the
entire Eurozone
German
Retail Sales Plunge Into Contraction
Please
Consider the
Markit Germany Retail PMI® Report.
Fastest
drop in retail sales since April 2010 as year-and-a-half run of
growth comes to an end.
Key
points:
- Retail PMI falls sharply in April
- Steepest decline in margins for two years...
- ...despite wholesale price inflation hitting 15-month low
Sharp
squeeze on operating margins
Lower
sales and strong market competition resulted in a sharp and
accelerated decline in margins across the German retail sector. The
latest fall in margins was seventeenth in consecutive month and also
the steepest for two years.
French
Retail Sales Plunge at Record Pace
Please
Consider the
Markit France Retail PMI® Report.
French
retail sales fall at survey-record rate in April
Key
points:
- Sales hit by weak economy and presidential elections
- Targets missed to greatest degree in 18 months
- Margin squeeze continues amid widespread discounting
French
retailers reported a sharp reduction in sales during April. The
month-on-month fall was the most marked recorded by the survey since
data collection started in January 2004. Sales were also down
considerably on a year-on-year basis, while previously set plans were
again missed. The weak sales performance occurred despite evidence of
substantial discounting and promotions among retailers, which
resulted in a further steep drop in gross margins.
The
headline Retail PMI® plunged to a series-record low of 41.4 in the
latest month, from 50.2 in March. The latest reading was below the
neutral 50.0 mark for the first time since January and indicative of
a steep month-on-month decline.
The
extent of the latest failure to meet targets was the greatest for
one-and-a-half years. Panelists are nevertheless optimistic that
sales will exceed previously set plans in May.
Factors
expected by retailers to boost sales over the coming three months
include the end of the presidential election, summer weather,
promotions and new products.
Note
the absurd level of optimism by French retailers.
Eurozone
Retail Sales Plunge at Strongest Pace Since Late-2008
Please
Consider the Markit Eurozone Retail PMI® Report.
Key
points:
- Retail PMI plunges to 41.3, lowest since November 2008
- All three countries surveyed post lower sales, with record decline in France
- Cost pressures for retailers at 16-month low
Plunging
to its second-lowest level on record in April, the PMI hit 41.3, down
from 49.1 in March. The latest figure signaled the largest monthly
fall in retail sales across the single currency area since the depths
of the global financial crisis in November 2008 (40.6).
Eurozone
retail PMI figures are based on responses from the three largest euro
area economies. For the first time since September 2010, retail sales
fell across Germany, France and Italy. The rate of contraction in
Germany was the fastest since April 2010, while French retailers
posted a survey-record drop as they reported disruption due to the
presidential elections. Italy continued to see the steepest overall
rate of decline, however, as the pace of contraction reaccelerated to
approach the record level posted in January.
The
annual rate of decline in Eurozone retail sales was also one of the
strongest since the survey started in January 2004. Sales have fallen
on an annual basis each month since last June.
Record
Job Losses, Record Retail Plunge in Italy
Please
Consider the
Markit Italy Retail PMI® Report.
Sharp
decrease in retail sales leads to survey-record job losses
Key
points:
- Sales fall at second-sharpest annual rate in series history
- Confidence sinks to four-month low
- Cost inflation slowest since December 2010
The
seasonally adjusted Italian Retail PMI® – an indicator of
month-on-month changes in total retail sales – fell to the greatest
extent in survey history in April, dropping from 42.4 in March to
32.8. This sharp and accelerated decrease in high street spending was
the second-fastest since December 2008, and extended the current
sequence of contraction in the sector to 14 months.
Retailers
in Italy sped up their rate of job shedding in April, with staffing
levels falling at the fastest pace since data were first compiled in
January 2004. This latest reduction in employment was primarily
attributed by survey respondents to lower sales and rising input
costs.
Vindication
For
months I have been reading the apologists at Markit (and elsewhere)
predict a short, shallow Eurozone recession.
Check
this snip from my April 4, 2012 post: Eurozone
Composite PMI® Signals Recession Says Markit; France in Renewed
Decline, German Growth Weakens, Italy and Spain Contract Further:
Chris
Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said:
“A
slight easing in the rate of decline of the Eurozone service sector
was insufficient to offset the first decline in manufacturing output
for three months, causing the overall economy to contract again in
March.
“With
the exception of a marginal expansion seen in January, the economy
has been in continual decline since last September. Although the
average rate of decline seen over the first quarter eased compared
with the final three months of last year, the survey data
nevertheless indicate that the region has slipped back into a
technical recession.
“The
downturn is currently only very mild, however, with gross domestic
product probably falling by just 0.2% in the first quarter.
Furthermore, with business confidence in the service sector running
at a far higher level than late last year, the recession may also be
brief.”
I
have been critical of Market analysis for months and this is the
worst yet.
First
they said Germany would prevent a recession, then Germany would
decouple, now they suggest this is only a "technical"
recession and the "the recession may be mild and brief".
The
European recession will be neither mild nor brief. Spain, Portugal,
and Greece are in economic depressions with no end in sight. Spain
and Italy (the 3rd and 4th largest eurozone markets) are poised for
steeper slides. Germany will not be immune to this as I have stated
for months on end.
German
manufacturing contracted in March and services sector will soon
follow. For some reason, Markit economists cannot figure this out.
This
was extremely easy to predict, yet most blew it.
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